In effect it already is metric. The pint is defined in UK law as 0.56826125 cubic decimetre. That's some accuracy there, eh?
That would break the rules. Capital letters are reserved for units based on a person - W for James Watt, V for Volta etc. Who was Pint & what did he contribute to volume determination? (Poor old Ohm had to be given Greek letter since zero & capital o would cause complete confusion.) sub units use lower case such as mm while bigger unis use upper case MW but that more or less falls by the way for commonly used measures such a km. Meanwhile kg completely breaks the rules because it is the basic unit but it uses the multiple k!
In NZ, back in the mid `70s, the Imperial pint of milk sold in glass bottles
What about 19/32?. Always gets roundedJordanMugen wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 05:10Isn't it entirely logical that a 11/32" socket is one size smaller than 3/8"?
It's so easy to find the right size imperial socket, none of this ridiculous 9mm is too big, so it must be 8mm business!
/sarcasm
A linear measurement of a quarter degree of toe will depend on the size of the wheel/tyre. So one can just as easily pick a wheel/tyre size where 0.25 degrees is a nice round metric number and a horrible US Customary unit number. Which is why using an angle is great - it's the same no mater what the diameter of the wheel/tyre is.godlameroso wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 18:03It's easier to measure angles and proportions in imperial than metric. A quarter of a degree of toe is the same as saying you have .25 inches of toe, is the same as saying you have 6mm and change of toe.
How is that an argument for imperial? A quarter of a degree is only a quarter of an inch of toe for a certain radius.godlameroso wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 18:03It's easier to measure angles and proportions in imperial than metric. A quarter of a degree of toe is the same as saying you have .25 inches of toe, is the same as saying you have 6mm and change of toe.
godlameroso wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 21:28I never said Imperial is better or worse, it's a different tool. I don't understand why everyone I talk to assumes I speak in extremes or absolutes? Is a hammer better than a ratchet? If you're removing bolts, no, if you're driving nails, sure.
please explain howgodlameroso wrote: ↑08 Jun 2021, 21:28It's easier to measure angles and proportions in imperial than metric.