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Author Topic: Imperial and/or metric units. Discussion on the use and teaching of  (Read 18155 times)
TonyK
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« Reply #45 on: August 03, 2014, 10:05:45 »

All of my domestic DIY construction and repair activity is calculated in feet and inches - that drives my teenage son mad, as he doesn't understand a word of it.

Chris, age 55, 6 ft, 34 in waist (on a good day).  Wink Cheesy Grin

Whereas all mine are done to metric units, because there's more of them, and they follow a logical sequence. This infuriates my wife, who thinks it far more rational to base the size the piece of wood she wants on the distance between nose and arrow for a randomly selected mediaeval longbowman, divided by three, then by twelve, then by up to 64.


Congratulations on your recent 200th Centaday!

Edit to correct units

I am soon to enter the world of Superkilodayuation.

FT,N! (1.88m, 85Kg and rising).
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Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #46 on: August 03, 2014, 19:50:09 »

... my wife, who thinks it far more rational to base the size the piece of wood she wants on the distance between nose and arrow for a randomly selected mediaeval longbowman, divided by three, then by twelve, then by up to 64.

I sense a kindred spirit there.  Wink Cheesy Grin
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« Reply #47 on: August 04, 2014, 12:22:33 »

During my trip along the m4 this morning I noticed another anomaly - while on the direction signs we have distances in miles, the distance markers at the side of the carriageway appear to be in kilometres at 500m spacing...
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ellendune
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« Reply #48 on: August 04, 2014, 19:31:44 »

During my trip along the m4 this morning I noticed another anomaly - while on the direction signs we have distances in miles, the distance markers at the side of the carriageway appear to be in kilometres at 500m spacing...

Yes because the distance markers are for the maintenance crews (who work in metric) not the public. 
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chrisr_75
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« Reply #49 on: August 05, 2014, 08:40:17 »

During my trip along the m4 this morning I noticed another anomaly - while on the direction signs we have distances in miles, the distance markers at the side of the carriageway appear to be in kilometres at 500m spacing...

Yes because the distance markers are for the maintenance crews (who work in metric) not the public. 

The signs I was referring to are the more obvious blue signs which actually called 'driver location markers' and are intended to accurately locate anyone stranded on the hard shoulder

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driver_location_sign

The small white, blue and red posts also display kilometres but are intended for other purposes, although I don't recall seeing any recently. Either way, it is a curious mix of units!
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TonyK
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« Reply #50 on: August 08, 2014, 16:01:25 »

I sense a kindred spirit there.  Wink Cheesy Grin

Yes, marriage is a compromise. Give them 2.54cm, and they'll take 1.6Km.  Grin

Time for a dram...
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mfpa
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« Reply #51 on: August 21, 2014, 01:31:40 »

As a kid, I was always amused by the Weetabix boxes stating the nutritional information in milligrammes per ounce.
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