The only clear picture I had was if you took the King's shilling you were screwed.
The only clear picture I had was if you took the King's shilling you were screwed.
Trying to avoid using non-integers (as in 9.5 stone)? I have no problem with non-integers.
BTW, I do think the Celsius temperature scale is more reasonable.
Each system has ONE denomination. The other word (cents or pence) indicates hundredths of that denomination. Saying both is a way to avoid recognizing that some numbers are not integers.
BTW, I've gotten about a dozen 50-cent pieces (and a few 2-dollar bills) is requests from charities.
[snip]
Saying that you thought the sign meant 90 mph doesn't get you any slack in Canada. You get adept at doing the conversion and recognizing an underpass marked for 4.5 meters was okay.
I never did get the dual conversion of liters to gallons and CAD$ to US$ down and just assumed I was getting screwed when I filled up. It was better when they did Imperial gallons and you figured you were getting a bonus.
In virtually all years I'd agree totally, but a few years back the Finnish hard rock/heavy metal group Lordi won it.
SteveW
There is justice in the world...
Thanks for confirming you actually live in the middle of the last century.
Yes. They were actually OK.
Are you really suggesting most Americans can't deal with a half?
Anyway, considering the weight of the average American, that precise a measurement isn't really needed.
Agreed. It's easier when zero is freezing point. And it's smaller numbers too. Why deal with a room temperature of 70 when you can have 20? We really don't need any unit more precise than a C. Even my brewing has an accepted range of 6C.
Are you really suggesting most Americans can't deal with a half?
Anyway, considering the weight of the average American, that precise a measurement isn't really needed.
Agreed. It's easier when zero is freezing point. And it's smaller numbers too. Why deal with a room temperature of 70 when you can have 20? We really don't need any unit more precise than a C. Even my brewing has an accepted range of 6C.
And I thought the Canadians were nice folk? Not the mounties then?
I really don't get why they make bridges which can't handle a standard lorry.
I never realised until recently that there were two sizes of gallon, until I discovered in a conversation with an American that we were coming to different results.
And I thought the Canadians were nice folk? Not the mounties then?
I really don't get why they make bridges which can't handle a standard lorry.
I never realised until recently that there were two sizes of gallon, until I discovered in a conversation with an American that we were coming to different results.
Yes it makes sense although any easy number to remmeber would be OK I guess.
Although the offical SI unit uses the triple point of water which is where it can exists as a solid, vapor and liquid which hapenes at 0.01C at 760mm Hg
actually it;s be 68F at 20C was handy in the days of photography as the americans prefered F.
Depends what you do, most people don't normally need to think about temperatures.
So how many stones are 171 pounds?
Not particularly. I had a Guelph Ontario cop inform me that Americans and out cowboy ways weren't welcome in his town. It did not work out well.
The older cities are the main problem. Trucks were smaller then. A 40' trailer was big but now 53' is pretty much standard.
The US uses the traditional wine gallon which was the normal gallon when we kicked you people out. Britain adopted the ale gallon for the Imperial gallon in 1824. No respect for tradition.
The important thing to remember is there are 8 pints in both gallons so presumably an English pint of beer is a better deal than a US pint. Rather moot point since only Irish pubs typically sell pints and I believe they are 16 ounce US pints.
If you're so hot on metric, why are you not drinking from liter glasses?
I'm going by what I hear on Top Gear.
-- =
A farmer in Yorkshire sees a bloke drinking from his stream and shouts, = =E2=80=9CEy up cocker, tha dunt wanna be drinkin watta frum theer, its f= ull o hoss piss an cow s**te an it could kill thee.=E2=80=9D The Bloke says, "Sir I am a muslim from Pakistan, can you be speaking cl= earer and slower please.=E2=80=9D The farmer replies, "If.... You.... Use.... Two.... Hands.... You.... Wo= n't.... Spill.... Any."
At least the Imperial gallon coverts directly to 10lb of water. Okay I know it it really 10.02lb, but who cares? It is close enough!
I prefer metric for engineering calculations (imperial has too many weird fudge factors to correct for odd unit combinations), but imperial for day to day life (the units scale much better to real life - a pound of food is a meal; inches and their divisions are useful, cms are too small or too big and don't divide easily into 1/4s, 1/8s, etc.)
SteveW
12st 3lb
SteveW
Fake news. A wise man once said 'The only substitute for cubic inches is cubic money.' First you start with a 430 ci engine (7L) and then you add the 6-71 blower. If that doesn't get it a dab of nitrous will do you.
And you just whip that off without a calculator. At least a stone could be 10 pounds rather than whatever you used to weigh bales of wool in the
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