BREAKING: The USA is switching to METRIC!

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  • Опубліковано 31 сер 2023
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @StumpyNubs
    @StumpyNubs  8 місяців тому +134

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    • @MichaelMantion
      @MichaelMantion 8 місяців тому

      Nixon tried to convert the us to Metric. That was the real reason they faked a scandal to get him out of office.

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 8 місяців тому

      If you stop to think of it, the push for the metric system is nothing more than a hatred by many of all things British. That's a really silly reason to adopt a system of measure. The fact is that a base 8 system (and 12 is just 1.5 times 8 and 16, obviously, twice 8) is superior in matters of trade. It works out well, people have written papers on this, for trade and really meshes well with the physical world. Base 10, OTOH, does not. Imagine if we had a 20 hour day with 10 hours for AM and 10 hours for PM. Imagine what a face clock would look like. A base ten system is for those of such limited intellect that they can't deal with anything but powers of 10. The metric system LIMITS thinking, and the world isn't so simple as the base 10 system. People are too afraid and too lazy to actually THINK.

    • @raymondbaehr3784
      @raymondbaehr3784 8 місяців тому +13

      Metric is so much simpler. I wish we as a country would just convert. Train the kids in school and jump to metric.

    • @TGMrac
      @TGMrac 8 місяців тому +4

      I didn´t learn French, but i know the way to build numbers is worse than the imperial system. The word for 80 means 4x20. They only count up to 20 and an addition in words.

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher 8 місяців тому

      Please keep using Imperial units, with metric converted plans. It's what almost all woodworkers in the USA use, and based on some of the comments, some people in other countries also use Imperial units when woodworking.
      It's not a perfect comparison, but it would not be cool to try to get everyone in the world to speak the same language. It will probably happen eventually, but why rush it?

  • @piptyson5512
    @piptyson5512 8 місяців тому +6950

    I used to love the metric system because of the easy use of dividing by 10. Seemed natural, it was the same number of fingers I had before I became a woodworker.

    • @uplink-on-yt
      @uplink-on-yt 8 місяців тому +560

      You grew extra fingers?

    • @vladtepes97
      @vladtepes97 8 місяців тому +118

      Ouch

    • @ionrazvan126
      @ionrazvan126 8 місяців тому

      ​@@uplink-on-ytclearly you never used a saw

    • @piptyson5512
      @piptyson5512 8 місяців тому +299

      @@uplink-on-yt 100% human, 0% salamander.

    • @arawtgabi
      @arawtgabi 8 місяців тому +189

      Depending on what happened, you can start using the Octal system

  • @alchemi8085
    @alchemi8085 7 місяців тому +213

    I prefer metric by a mile.

    • @smithdoesstuff
      @smithdoesstuff Місяць тому +3

      This is a drastically underrated comment. I’m sorry on behalf of the internet.

    • @vplph
      @vplph 26 днів тому +3

      ​@@smithdoesstuff we would say... I won't move a mm towards empirical.

    • @Birdman953
      @Birdman953 26 днів тому

      😂

    • @user-gb8jp8ew6z
      @user-gb8jp8ew6z 25 днів тому

      As a european, this is funny and i actually never heard it before.

    • @rigamortice
      @rigamortice 25 днів тому

      I don't

  • @bobo2186
    @bobo2186 Місяць тому +78

    As an American, I was amazed by the ease of calculating volume by size and also the weight. 1ml(of water) is 1 cubic centimeters, which is one gram or in larger terms 1 liter of water is 1000 cubic cm and 1 kilo. Not necessarily as easy if you are looking for the wight of something other than water, but volume still works. Without looking it up, how many gallons are in a cubic foot?

    • @Scudmaster11
      @Scudmaster11 12 днів тому +1

      No one does that... there is 0 need for when messuring the weight of water based on its weight... ive never done that my entire life... metric is only good for messuring chemicals and thats where it only belongs... but for everything else... its a awful system... imperial is and always will be better

    • @samuelbudzinak
      @samuelbudzinak 12 днів тому +2

      1 cubic decimeter of water is not exactly 1kg. At room temperature it is about 997g. It is close, but it is because of water density

    • @Ragnar8504
      @Ragnar8504 12 днів тому +17

      @@Scudmaster11 Of course that comes in handy, for example if you want to know whether your floor can hold your new water bed with x hundred litres of water inside it. Or if you're building a DIY raft using air-filled tubes and you want to know how much volume you need to keep your weight afloat.
      Imperial is only better for those who're used to it, changing is always difficult.

    • @Scudmaster11
      @Scudmaster11 11 днів тому

      @Ragnar8504 the only thing i hear difficult is you... imperial isnt hard... and we dont normally need to convert... PS messuring air buoyancy with metric is stupid... water beds arent really used (only in vary rare situations are they bought).... ive given metric a try before and hated it... couldnt visualize anything... it was all over reliant on objects and machines as because the numbers are unweildly)... also... if you think converting between stuff in imperial is hard... its not.... you are only nameing the vary few novelty things metric is only better at... but imperial crushes the cpmpetiton by MILES..... achers of land is better (and economic) if you want one that you will never top... achers are known by how much work a famer can get done in one day (back then)... so its a efficient way for land... even though i dont personally use it... its used in land messurement of how much there is

    • @LTimotheus
      @LTimotheus 11 днів тому +3

      @@Scudmaster11Indeed, 1 metric achre, aka 100m^2, aka 10x10m, is better!

  • @romad357
    @romad357 3 місяці тому +52

    ALL of our imperial dimensions are officially defined using metric units. For example, the inch is exactly 25.4mm (2.54cm) so a foot is exactly 30.48cm and 3 feet (1 yard) is 91.44cm or 0.9144 meter.

    • @markevans2294
      @markevans2294 3 дні тому

      The metric inch of 25,4mm also happens to be a compromise value between the Imperial and US inches.
      The US never used the Imperial measuring system, since this dates from the early 19th century.

    • @Chaosmite
      @Chaosmite 14 годин тому

      It had to be since it was originally measured by our own body, and since everyone has different size bodies, therefore it had to be standardized.

  • @TheOriginalFayari
    @TheOriginalFayari 8 місяців тому +550

    This guy has top-tier humor. It was one blow after the other, delivered in the most matter-of-fact voice, that had me chortling. Subscribed.

    • @khoado1999
      @khoado1999 7 місяців тому +2

      IKR! It sounded so informative 😂

    • @julianivanov3058
      @julianivanov3058 7 місяців тому +9

      Funnily enough that's very reminiscent of British humour

    • @abstractexchange5057
      @abstractexchange5057 7 місяців тому +2

      the inch unit system and other unit system are stupid. It is not because of stupid system, but because that they are not compatible with the international system SI. All other unit systems must compatible with the international system SI.
      I often use computer programs for technical machines and other engineering tasks. And I often have to store and enter various values for various variables in computer programs, then let computer programs use entered values to calculate various tasks. You know that computer programs use standard known scientific formulas to calculate. If you enter values for variables in different unit system, then any time you add values, you must check the unit used in scientific formulas, then you must convert the added values to required unit systems. It is nightmare in engigeering tasks and scientific tasks.
      The only solution is that : use universal unit system SI : all programs and people exchage and communicate only with values in SI system. Thus no need to convert and check formulas when you apply variables in scientific formulas.
      Other unit system maybe comfortable only in conversation communication languages, but not in engineering tasks.

    • @mikevandenboom5958
      @mikevandenboom5958 6 місяців тому

      He's on his way to be another Leslie Neilson

    • @michab4083
      @michab4083 Місяць тому +1

      I particular loved the bit about the 10 dollars in a saving account ... The perfect argument for going metric 😂

  • @joeyager8479
    @joeyager8479 8 місяців тому +602

    I spent 45 years as a machine designer. The SI (System of Units), the official name for the "metric system", is by far simpler than the Imperial System (Customary Units of Measure in the USA). Using the SI System is like learning and becoming fluent in a second language. Once you understand it you can switch back and forth without too much trouble. It's really very easy to learn and way less confusing.

    • @tienglongmy
      @tienglongmy 8 місяців тому +11

      I'm a contractor, sorry your metric system is inferior.

    • @riangarianga
      @riangarianga 8 місяців тому +70

      @@tienglongmy Please elaborate.

    • @newolde1
      @newolde1 8 місяців тому +22

      Fock having to use fractions for everything. Now if we could clean up the English language cuz it's an absolute mess. 😂

    • @SaurianSavior
      @SaurianSavior 8 місяців тому +57

      @@riangarianga I am not a contractor, but I hardly see how that's relevant. Whether you are a contractor or making use of contractors, the majority of the planet uses metric. I guess it must suck if you're a contractor ONLY doing work in imperial. You basically are restricted to working in the US, Liberia or Myanmar. And there's always the risk of conversion error, like the case of the Hubble mirror.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 8 місяців тому +35

      @@riangarianga He can't, you just took really poor bait from a stupid troll who probably thinks bud light is a beer, poor fellow...

  • @mramigo098
    @mramigo098 6 місяців тому +20

    I’m Canadian, grew up as a kid in the SI world, adopted into the metric system when Canada flipped and am equally confident in using either system. However, I frame houses 16” on center, using 2x4s, 2x6s, 2x8s etc, do most cutting with either a 8 1/4” or 10” blade on my power tools. When I drive to the local hardware store I keep to an average posted speed of 60 km/hr over a driving distance of 12 kilometres, all the while wondering if the weight of the load of 5/8” plywood will make the trailer tongue weight exceed its maximum rating of 200lbs. Of course during the drive home my wife phones and asks if I could pick up a pound of ground beef, 2 litres of 3% milk, 150-200g of freshly sliced smoked ham. I said “of course I will, but first have to stop and get some gas - hey, did you notice gas prices dropped to 173.9 a litre today!?!?!” Her response: “ great, now we have a few extra toonies to take with us on our trip to the States tomorrow!” And, finally “Yes dear I’ll remember to drive at their posted speed limit of 60mph!” Now I ask you, do I qualify for dual-citizenship, or do I simply have to accept the fact I live in a global world.

    • @niemi5858
      @niemi5858 13 днів тому +2

      Retired Canadian carpenter here. I lived through the same conversion. I was a foreman with about 20 men working on a large concrete forming job and it was the first project we did with metric drawings. The mistakes were a horrendous cost, all bacuse the guys were trying to convert to imperial. After a couple of days, I had to put a stop to this so I went and bought 20 metric only tape measures and the next morning exchanged with the guys for their old ones. It took a day or so, but they soon got used to it. I only lost 2 men because of it and they were about to be let go anyway.

    • @kjelllindberg6987
      @kjelllindberg6987 13 днів тому

      Is your 2x4 actually 2x4? Our equivalent is 45*95mm so it got a bit smaller, old people still call them 2x4 (that would be 50.8x101.6mm). Or is it that raw timber starts at 2x4 and after it is planed it turns into 45x95 if so you are already in metric...

    • @Ragnar8504
      @Ragnar8504 12 днів тому +1

      @@kjelllindberg6987 In the US it's much worse, I think the term 2x4 is defined based on some low-grade timber, while modern construction timbers are a higher grade. Other explanations say the 2x4 was measured before drying and milling. Therefore a 2x4 is 1 1/2x3 1/2" or 38x89 mm. Which isn't a lot more than the 5x8 we use in Austria (48x78 mm). We rarely use those for framing walls though, that's 95% metal studs because they're cheaper, lighter and easier to assemble, no nails or screws involved. Load-bearing walls are either masonry or much bigger timbers.

    • @HieronymusChockvivantvanit
      @HieronymusChockvivantvanit 5 днів тому

      @@Ragnar8504 My grandfather was a sawyer. He cut 2x4s out of logs that were 2" by 4". But then downstairs in the mill they got planed down to something smaller.

  • @thomassciurba5323
    @thomassciurba5323 6 місяців тому +28

    I’m a retired engineer and prefer the metric system. Unfortunately I get forced back to using the imperial system sometimes because many materials in the US are sold in those units. But I have found that metric hardware and fasteners can often be cheaper and easier to find especially online.

    • @LudwigVaanArthans
      @LudwigVaanArthans 4 місяці тому +2

      The free market provides
      Supply and demand, fewer manufacturers produce in USC, the vast amount of the rat produce in metric, so the prices go down due to direct competition
      But I'm sure manufacturers in the US never bother lobbying against metric in your government, that would be self serving and greedy

  • @michalurbanful
    @michalurbanful 8 місяців тому +989

    I'm from the Czech Republic and while I got mostly used to the US lengths and weights thanks to watching all the cool American bushcraft stuff, I always felt a bit sad that you guys didn't moved to the metric system. The ease of multiplying or dividing by 10 let's my simple brain to do other things. :D

    • @timosdinkydetailing
      @timosdinkydetailing 8 місяців тому +19

      I have Several Czech made garden hoses (my wife is Czech) from a company that predated the collapse of communism (two are over 25 years old). The internal diameter is 1/2". It's printed right on the hose!

    • @RufianEmbozado
      @RufianEmbozado 8 місяців тому +11

      ​@@timosdinkydetailing So? I keep having to buy irrigation and plumbing material by inches. Same for computer and too many other things. Most hardware is sold in inches and I'm damn sure it's not by the influence of Liberia or Myanmar. It smells more like USA exceptionalism. It must be so great to know there are like 7.5 billion dwarves abroas who disagree with you... and your yards, gallons, ounces, tablespoons and so on. Such a power!

    • @mernokallat645
      @mernokallat645 8 місяців тому +5

      @@timosdinkydetailing I have seen new hoses that have 13 mm written on them.

    • @matthewnirenberg
      @matthewnirenberg 8 місяців тому +9

      Respectfully, that ease only exists as long as you either don't have anything right of the decimal, or a select tiny number that's easily manageable. US Customary units get around this as everything is fractions which are easy to work with and there's no numbers right of the decimal to worry about.
      Once you get into giant numbers right of the decimal and have to do complex math with them, it becomes problematic, especially where rounding gets involved. Round and varying positions (say 4 decimal places on one value, then 8, then 9) for different numbers and your answer is way off what was expected; sure you could pick a point at which to round but at what point does that consistently work when the numbers are coming from multiple different equations? This is why software such as GNU Octave and Matlab exist to perform such calculations rounding at ridiculous numbers of decimal places.
      When I was at university getting my degree in mechanical engineering was when I discovered the point I made in the paragraph above this one, I was the only person in the tutorial class who kept getting answers that matched the book, most others were off by quite a significant amount. When being asked why I was getting the answer the book had when everyone else wasn't, I demonstrated it to the class. The professor noticed that I was instinctively converting everything to imperial and then solving as fractions whilst everyone else wasn't. When I reached my final answer, I converted back to metric and got the correct answer.
      Having grown up in the bush in Australia, fractions were taught as a priority and many farmers used "Imperial" (basically the British version of US Customary units). Most land is sold and listed in acres as people understand that better than hectares (which are only used on govt records alongside the acre value).

    • @matthewnirenberg
      @matthewnirenberg 8 місяців тому +4

      @@mernokallat645 Yeah, but remember that it's only directly compatible with new plumbing parts unless they've made it as 1/2" but incorrectly listed it as 13mm. In reality 1/2" is 12.7mm so that's a significant difference when compared to real 13mm. This is why plumbing parts are still made in Imperial and why both are still used in the Commonwealth countries - new houses are metric but older ones (pre-2010) aren't.

  • @timdouglass9831
    @timdouglass9831 8 місяців тому +564

    I'm old enough that converting to metric is easy on paper, but trying to re-train my mind to visualize things in anything but inches, feet, and yards is going to be a challenge.

    • @AWZool
      @AWZool 8 місяців тому +83

      You have to pretend, so the next gen. can do this naturally.

    • @Shadow27374
      @Shadow27374 8 місяців тому +34

      Oh yes, i have this problem with inches, feet and yard... i am from germany... :D

    • @pawelzielinski1398
      @pawelzielinski1398 8 місяців тому +17

      @@Shadow27374 Same here. I live in a metric world. I am from Poland. Fortunately I am a scientist, so we use metric system at work as well.

    • @LockeClone
      @LockeClone 8 місяців тому +17

      It took me about 4 days to really click into metric when I was taking an automation class where the software was only metric. I've kind of lost that "sense" now, but it really wasn't bad.

    • @M3rVsT4H
      @M3rVsT4H 8 місяців тому +9

      Another metric guy here, but fortunate to be comfortable in both systems. I visualise in feet and inches all the time. But I measure and cut in mm.. If that makes sense. I reckon stick with what you know, and as you say, it's easy to do the maths when its time to draw the plan.

  • @magisterstofil
    @magisterstofil Місяць тому +5

    As I don't live in USA, Liberia or Myanmar I use metrics. But when I am working with a folding ruler I can choose inch or mm. Which is good for measuring, when the hole might not be whole mm but linstead ines up with the inch side of the ruler. Almost all folding rulers in Sweden only uses mm but you can still find the ones with both inches and mm, my favourite ones. Thank you for helping with the fast reading in inches.

  • @dingleberrysnigglefritz
    @dingleberrysnigglefritz 6 місяців тому +23

    I've noticed that since I started using a scale to measure cooking and baking ingredients I find myself measuring in grams voluntarily. I love progress, but I hate change. Surprisingly, this change sneaked in and worked for me.

    • @Yupppi
      @Yupppi Місяць тому +1

      Word on that. Ever since I got a kitchen scale I abandoned desilitres and other stupid measures as well. Everything in grams allows my half-decent home cooking to be decent.

    • @ledocteur7701
      @ledocteur7701 15 днів тому +1

      @@2001kb As a metric user, pretty much the only reason I sometimes measure ingredients using a cup is because we have a measurement cup with scales for each common powders (sugar, flour, ...) and guess what those scales are labeled as ? grams.
      It's just a non-mechanical and non-electronic balance disguised as a cup.

    • @Scudmaster11
      @Scudmaster11 12 днів тому

      Then why use metric if it keeps on changing so often... it is worst then when windows 10 launched and there was a update every 20 minutes

    • @ledocteur7701
      @ledocteur7701 12 днів тому +1

      @@Scudmaster11 what do you mean ? metric hasn't changed sinced it's creation.
      Why would you ever think that.

    • @Scudmaster11
      @Scudmaster11 12 днів тому

      @ledocteur7701 oh you dont know then... also... it was made with a mistake (its not a perfect system) ((even if it was... it would still be imperfect and awfully flawed))

  • @peterking8586
    @peterking8586 8 місяців тому +462

    I’m from the UK & I remember our conversion to metric. It was a great move.
    I took my scuba instructors exam, I used metric for the physics portion, most others used imperial. I finished about an hour before everyone else (generally scoring higher).

    • @carcharhinus_555
      @carcharhinus_555 8 місяців тому +55

      Geez, don't even want to think of doing this in imperial units. Speaking of, I wonder how many accidents happened because of imperial-units calculation errors.

    • @carcharhinus_555
      @carcharhinus_555 8 місяців тому +8

      Though as an add on question, we use 10m=+1bar pressure. Do USCS divers use PSI for that as well? Is there some easy way to gauge? Or one just remembers 10m=+14.5 PSI (or is it rounded to 14)?

    • @thomasherrin6798
      @thomasherrin6798 8 місяців тому +8

      I'm from the UK also and whilst scuba diving might be easier in metric we are not all metric yet, its a mixture, the temperature is Celcius though and that's definitely better!?!

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan 8 місяців тому +3

      Even beer is metric an imperial pint is 568ml in Ireland a brewers yearly output is measured in hectolitres

    • @peterking8586
      @peterking8586 8 місяців тому

      @@carcharhinus_555 Yes, they use PSI.

  • @sailingspark9748
    @sailingspark9748 8 місяців тому +398

    As a hobbyist boat builder, most of my work is done in metric. Honestly, I have always hated adding, multiplying, subtracting, and dividing fractions. It is a serious pain and takes far longer than just learning to use the metric system.

    • @antoniiocaluso1071
      @antoniiocaluso1071 7 місяців тому +3

      ever build an ECO6 micro-cruising catamaran sailboat? 13mm ply/epoxy/glass. Super-cool! I built one. Check it out if you've not. It'll put hair on your chest. haaaaa built a one-sheet tender for it, too. fun :-) next up is a micro canalboat

    • @abstractexchange5057
      @abstractexchange5057 7 місяців тому +11

      the inch unit system and other unit system are stupid. It is not because of stupid system, but because that they are not compatible with the international system SI. All other unit systems must compatible with the international system SI.
      I often use computer programs for technical machines and other engineering tasks. And I often have to store and enter various values for various variables in computer programs, then let computer programs use entered values to calculate various tasks. You know that computer programs use standard known scientific formulas to calculate. If you enter values for variables in different unit system, then any time you add values, you must check the unit used in scientific formulas, then you must convert the added values to required unit systems. It is nightmare in engigeering tasks and scientific tasks.
      The only solution is that : use universal unit system SI : all programs and people exchage and communicate only with values in SI system. Thus no need to convert and check formulas when you apply variables in scientific formulas.
      Other unit system maybe comfortable only in conversation communication languages, but not in engineering tasks.

    • @jacobh9487
      @jacobh9487 7 місяців тому +2

      I suppose 16.5cm is a lot more impressive sounding than 6.5 inches of manhood. I have to revert back to college lab mentality, scientific notations etc. Biggest daily thing would be getting used to speeds, temperatures, and body weights in Kg.

    • @antoniiocaluso1071
      @antoniiocaluso1071 7 місяців тому

      guess ol sailingspark9748 is too-busy building some boat, so he can't respond here :-) Heyyy...I'm building myself an modded-Escargot canalboat now. What are you? And where is the least-expensive Epoxy to be found? I use alot :-)

    • @sailingspark9748
      @sailingspark9748 7 місяців тому

      @@antoniiocaluso1071 Sorry, I was away sailing on the Chesapeake leading up the Small Craft Festival in St. Michaels.
      And no, I have never built an eco6, My boats tends to be long an pointy. A couple of kayaks, a wherry, and I just finished up a Milgate duck punt.
      My next boat will be Canoe Yawl, just have not decided how big or small I want to go.
      I tend to get my epoxy from Jamestown Distributors. Being in NJ, the delivery from R.I. is super quick.

  • @completelyboringstuff204
    @completelyboringstuff204 6 місяців тому +9

    As a Harley drag racer in Europe, I´m surrounded by either system- drive 320 kilometers to Hockenheim at 34 degrees Celsius, go for a 1.4 second 60feet time, explain how much cc a 96 ci motor has got, get a 3/16" allen wrench to tighten some 1/4" bolts, and enjoy half a liter of beer from Belgium afterwards. Went fine so far. Thanks for making serious stuff fun to watch!!

    • @paulwinters8920
      @paulwinters8920 2 місяці тому

      I have not thought of Hockenheim in a very long time. I was at the Formula 2 race when Jim Clark was killed, that was a long time ago.

    • @Ryarios
      @Ryarios 8 днів тому

      Exactly.

    • @danh6720
      @danh6720 7 днів тому

      The difference is you get to dabble in Imperial. You don't have to live in it.

  • @danh6720
    @danh6720 7 днів тому +3

    I recently got into 3d printing. Everything is metric by default in that field. I love it. I don't feel like I'm swimming against the current like I do in other mechanical endeavors in the US. I'm really tired of people resisting a much easier method because... Because what exactly I don't know. Change is scary I guess.

  • @ImusNoxa
    @ImusNoxa 8 місяців тому +565

    As a Canadian, it's even worse up here. We oscillate between metric and imperial so frequently, you'd think we were experiencing convulsions. I love the humorous approach to this subject.

    • @gometricusa
      @gometricusa 8 місяців тому

      You can thank your recalcitrant neighbor to the south for that. American pop culture is so pervasive that the USA also hangs up the rest of the world with it's olde fashioned feet, pounds and such. It's so out of place on a modern globe.

    • @StephFacca
      @StephFacca 8 місяців тому +16

      I was going to comment the same. Since we are so close to the US, we use both in an odd, haphazard way. Even worse for those of us who grew up in border towns!

    • @jimrobertson8357
      @jimrobertson8357 8 місяців тому +35

      Here in the UK we would ask for 3m of 2 x4, so we mix and match all the time. Gas is sold in lites but we talk about miles per gallon.

    • @superd222tube
      @superd222tube 8 місяців тому +11

      We have bilingual measuring tapes!

    • @nicholas5623
      @nicholas5623 8 місяців тому +7

      Also Canadian here, construction industry atleast is still the old way good ol' feet and inches

  • @Pepsimaxaddict
    @Pepsimaxaddict 7 місяців тому +121

    As a flight mechanic it would be a 100 times easier if the American engines were designed for metric

    • @sergio-er1zx
      @sergio-er1zx 14 днів тому +5

      R u working in Boing for any chance? 💀

    • @markthomas919
      @markthomas919 14 днів тому +3

      Apparently you can hammer on metric sockets onto aircraft spec bolts, Boeing,

    • @snowleopardseal
      @snowleopardseal 14 днів тому +4

      It would be 212x easier

    • @Scudmaster11
      @Scudmaster11 12 днів тому

      Ehh no... miles are better... imperial is better

  • @PR-fk5yb
    @PR-fk5yb 3 місяці тому +1

    Canada here. We converted to the metric system about 40-50 years ago. We are still ordering our food in pounds and pint and galon. And using 2x3 and 2x4,etc... It won't go away overnight rest assured.

  • @tepesvoda464
    @tepesvoda464 3 дні тому

    Lenght:
    1 meter=100 cm=1000 mm
    For area you square up.
    A hectare has 10.000 sqm, a sqkm has 1.000.000 sqm.
    For volume, 1 cubic meter =1000 cubic decimeters.
    1 cubic decimeter ( a cube 10 cm x 10 cm) volume= 1 liter.
    For weight:
    The weight of a liter of water= 1 kilogram.
    1000 kg weight = 1 metric ton
    Temperature: based on the change of status of water at sea level=
    0 centigrade= ice melting point
    100 centigrade= water boiling point

  • @DominusFeles
    @DominusFeles 8 місяців тому +401

    A funny thing is that although almost everything over here is measured in SI units (that's why you easily can calculate that one cubic meter = 1000 liter etc.), we also have traces of imperial. One common example is computer screens, we buy them in 15, 21, 27 inches - that's just the international standard for them 🙃 No-one knows exactly what it means but we know what screen size we're expecting.

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae 8 місяців тому +20

      The 19" rack, for datacenter and sound engineers is an other one

    • @JBB685
      @JBB685 8 місяців тому +14

      I believe the international standard for plane runways is also measured in feet

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae 8 місяців тому +19

      @@JBB685 probably because flying happens in feet/miles, which came from ships, which didn't change after metric was created.

    • @EddoWagt
      @EddoWagt 8 місяців тому +11

      Actually this pretty much only happens with inches for some reason, computer screens, wheel diameters, piping thread sizes. All in inches for some reason. Can't think of any non inch standards (apart from the airplane runways mentioned before, but those are also distances)

    • @scratchy996
      @scratchy996 8 місяців тому +11

      @@EddoWagtIt's funny, because computer screens are in inches, but TV screen sizes are in cm.

  • @bikermike721
    @bikermike721 8 місяців тому +371

    I’ve used inches and fractions almost forever in my workshop. But during my last project building a desk, I got real tired of adding fractions like 3/8 + 1/4 + 3/16 to get a total I need to make a cut. I whipped out my metric tape measure and almost never looked back. I reduced my scrapped cuts as well! 1:49

    • @devilsadvocate6989
      @devilsadvocate6989 8 місяців тому +14

      ditto, I use metric whenever possible. especially if its a project I am doing alone, for myself. I grab the metric tape every time.

    • @JDeWittDIY
      @JDeWittDIY 8 місяців тому +10

      6/16 + 4/16 + 3/16 = 13/16 ...... if you convert like that in your head, it's trivial to add fractions on the fly... For woodworking, where the smallest fraction will be 1/16, this works great.

    • @MrWookie1981
      @MrWookie1981 8 місяців тому +14

      @@JDeWittDIY but think of all the pencil lead you save by not having to write the denominator all the time.

    • @adaslesniak
      @adaslesniak 8 місяців тому +17

      ​@@JDeWittDIYIt always helps to multiply things by some number before adding them and then divide result by 16. It's so much easier than to just add them :p

    • @damianjones6546
      @damianjones6546 8 місяців тому +3

      Yeah, make things simple that's what I say. Not everyone can figure out the complicated fractions.

  • @tristandunn4628
    @tristandunn4628 12 днів тому +4

    Great to see an American with a tongue-in-cheek/sarcastic sense of humour. Keep up the good work! I'm from the UK and remember inches and feet kinda being around when I was a kid in the late 70s/early 80s, but metric was most definitely taught in schools. The weather was a bit odd, as we had temperatures in both scales, but Celsius obviously won out. We've kinda stalled at about 90% metric. We still use miles and pints. Although it'll mess with my head for a while, I wouldn't begrudge finishing the job off. Whether that will actually happen remains to be seen. Here's hoping the US joins the party!!

    • @Ragnar8504
      @Ragnar8504 12 днів тому

      These days I'm surprised when I come across Brits born after the introduction of the metric system who still use feet and inches. There's a few more examples though, like using feet and inches to measure your height or using stone for your weight.
      A recent push to re-introduce imperial units post-Brexit failed spectacularly, with a staggering 98.something per cent voting for remaining metric in a poll.
      BTW, I don't think any country in the world has ever gone fully metric. As far as I know all plumbing threads are either American (NPT) or British (BSP/Whitworth), both of which are Imperial. While copper and plastic pipes have been metric on the continent pretty much forever, galvanised and black pipes aren't. I haven't found much evidence so far but I assume BSP spread across the continent as the British built gas works all across Europe and supplied everything, including the pipes and fittings, in the mid-19th century.

    • @tristandunn4628
      @tristandunn4628 11 днів тому

      I'm guilty of that with height and wight. I'm making a more conscious effort to know that I'm 1m80, rather than 5' 11" and my (over)weight in kilos!

  • @androidthumper
    @androidthumper 5 місяців тому +1

    Just found your channel. I'm on the start of my woodworking journey. Love to see your humor as is high quality as your woodworking knowledge and teachings. Thank you!

  •  8 місяців тому +861

    Your script writing in this video is amazing. It is ironic, smart. really good. I envy your talent.

    • @noquedaniuno
      @noquedaniuno 8 місяців тому +14

      love the jab about not knowing to use fractions...

    • @moonrazk
      @moonrazk 8 місяців тому +5

      His older videos are full of this snarky writing.

    • @nellayema2455
      @nellayema2455 8 місяців тому +5

      He's brilliant!

    • @Raven.flight
      @Raven.flight 8 місяців тому +1

      Script writing?
      You tell lies!!
      He did this on the fly!!!

    • @joetoner8848
      @joetoner8848 8 місяців тому +1

      Could not have said it better!

  • @torstenhansen4308
    @torstenhansen4308 8 місяців тому +139

    I grew up metric but have used inches for decades since moving to the US; years in the construction industry certainly helped that along. I now find myself using millimeters when precision is required and feet and inches for rougher work. What really has me scratching my head is decimal inches, especially rulers with sixteenths on one side and tenths on the other. A trap for the unwary if I ever saw one.

    • @timjbarnes
      @timjbarnes 8 місяців тому +5

      And for some reason surveyors like to use decimal feet. Very odd.

    • @drewbacca1981
      @drewbacca1981 8 місяців тому +7

      I'm a surveyor, decimal feet have ruined inches for me forever

    • @skipinkoreaable
      @skipinkoreaable 8 місяців тому +27

      ​@@drewbacca1981My feet are decimal. They have 10 toes.

    • @Agnemons
      @Agnemons 8 місяців тому

      Obviously they got cold feet converting to metric.@@timjbarnes

    • @davidroddini1512
      @davidroddini1512 8 місяців тому +2

      I work in a company that makes windows and sunrooms. The labels/order slips list dimensions in decimal feet and inches but we have “the giant inch” on each machine. This is a 4x5 card with 1 “inch” along the long side divided into 16ths of an inch. It is then marked with dots showing common decimal inch increments such as 3/10 inch. That way workers can tell at a glance approximately where to cut if they only have a standard tape measure with 16ths of an inch but not 10ths.

  • @Hordil
    @Hordil 8 днів тому

    Hello from germany, I got old recipes of my grandfathers bakery and his precessors, and there are units some people would have never heard of in germany. We all changed to a system that unites us all as people on this world, and I would love to see the US finally doing the switch officially in all matters.

  • @josephmueller4278
    @josephmueller4278 6 місяців тому

    This made my day. Item of interest: Home Depot sells 12 mm plywood, but they label it 15/32. Then they describe it as 1/2 inch. Plywood producers can market metric sized product anywhere in the world which explains this. They just have to tell us Americans what it's similar to in standard.

  • @markdayneowalla
    @markdayneowalla 8 місяців тому +193

    I was born and raised in the US and now live in Canada. I comfortably switch between imperial and metric; sometimes within the same project. For certain though any time I need to find the center of something, I use metric. Division of whole numbers beats fractions any day.

    • @etherealbolweevil6268
      @etherealbolweevil6268 8 місяців тому +6

      Quite. I enjoy watching people trying to centre something 43 and 3/8 inches on one side, 44 and 5/16 on the other, how much to move to be in the centre? Long silence. Another long silence. Hit with hammer. Repeat. On the other hand, my workshop is imperial with a mixture of BSF and BA threading tools, fraction and number drills, imperial measuring tools, machine tools graduated in 1/1000 inch. It will not be going metric anytime soon. Multiply that by a whole economy. Unless the US government funds it, there won't be much movement, and it will be hugely expensive as every last broken tool will be dug out to be replaced by taxpayer's money.

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 8 місяців тому +6

      Studied in BCIT and went through the same thing having to learn both measurements, and by learning both I mean spend 90% of my time memorizing the unit rates of all the imperial units.

    • @SI0AX
      @SI0AX 8 місяців тому +9

      @@etherealbolweevil6268 I hate imperial with a passion. I *always* convert imperial to metric before I do anything. And If I have a bunch of damn drills or like 10-20 wrenches or sockets that are imperial, I have to line them up in order to know which one is bigger than the other FFS I *hate* imperial!

    • @poisonedtruth
      @poisonedtruth 8 місяців тому +1

      @@etherealbolweevil6268 You gave both examples i will use those, finding center is easy. On odd numbers 43 3/8 for example subtract 1 to make it even leaving 42. divide by 2 = 21. for the fractions you add the numerator and the denominator together = 11 your new numerator. to get your denominator you just double your old one so 16. all together thats 21 11/16". Evens are super easy 44 5/16" ex. divide your whole number by 2. so 22 then just double your denominator so 32. that gives you 22 5/32"

    • @nova396
      @nova396 8 місяців тому +3

      Oh really? Take off .003 in machining, or take off .000118? Sit down.

  • @slipsonic809
    @slipsonic809 8 місяців тому +173

    I bought a fully metric tape measure for work doing HVAC. The other guys give me a hard time about it but it's easier to divide 120cm into two or three parts than it is 47.2441 inches. I regularly need to center mini split heads on a wall or between windows and it saves so much time and mental effort. They told me all the tricks for finding half with standard but i dont even need them with metric. It's also a smaller scale so more ability to be accurate. I started using metric for 3d printing modeling. Fusion 360 was set default to metric so I tried it. I'll never go back now. I still use standard on new construction jobs because there's standards for stud spacing etc. but I use metric whenever I can.

    • @blauesKopftuch
      @blauesKopftuch 8 місяців тому +10

      If you are still new to metric: decide wether to use cm or mm and stick with it, don't mix units, don't switch units otherwise you'll get confused by your own notes pretty fast. If you don't like to type in decimal points in fusion: go for mm. But note: many rulers / tape measures come in cm, unless they are from/for Australia, where they made mm the default unit by law.
      Mixing units is terrible, say i go out to buy a piece of wood for a friend and he writes down 20 x 100 x 200. Thickness is obviously 20mm (because 20cm would be too much), but is it 100 mm x 200 cm or 100 cm x 200 cm or 100 cm x 200 mm? All three are reasonable sizes.

    • @ingo_8628
      @ingo_8628 8 місяців тому +4

      @@blauesKopftuch The rule says, if no units are written, the numbers mean mm, if somebody means cm but doesnt write that and sends someone else with that sheet of paper to a store he is just an idiot. If anything is unclear, why dont you just make phonecall?

    • @crusaderanimation6967
      @crusaderanimation6967 8 місяців тому +8

      Calling unit system only you and few other countries uses standsrd is so American.

    • @pacman10182
      @pacman10182 8 місяців тому

      what tape measure has decimal inch?

    • @erickleinwolterink3524
      @erickleinwolterink3524 8 місяців тому +6

      You mean "47 and a quarter, shy." Right?

  • @zaxchannel2834
    @zaxchannel2834 11 днів тому

    That's what I've been saying, all of our common tools, meds, food packaging, etc. has metric measurements in addition to American measurements. The speedometer in cars has both. The only place you have to remember that we aren't metric is on the speed limit signs, bathroom scales, and weather reports

  • @johnjeanb
    @johnjeanb 7 місяців тому

    Frenchman here. What a great video! Thanks. I have observed that people everywhere are clinging to references of their youth. In my youth (1950s) many people in France were still speaking of sou(s) when it has officially disappeared in 1795 when the pound tournois is replaced with the Franc. "Tiens voila 100 sous" that was to say here are 5 Francs but totally out of the blue. Long story short: I fully understand why it takes so long for a measurement system to be replaced.
    Funny aspect: weight everyday American measurements system is called "Avoirdupois" (Means in old French "haveweight"). This originates from Normandy in France and is based on a Pound with 16 Onces and was created in the 13th century. ("Those bloody French!")

  • @Smokeyr67
    @Smokeyr67 8 місяців тому +314

    I grew up when Australia converted from Imperial to Metric, my Mum took advantage of it (for a short while) by explaining to the police officer who pulled her over for doing 100kph (60mph) in a 60 kph zone that she was only obeying the speed sign that said 60:)

    • @zyamadeadborn1785
      @zyamadeadborn1785 8 місяців тому +30

      I heard a story about a guy driving an american car imported used to Russia when he got pulled over for speeding on a highway and when asked how fast he was going said: "Dunno, a hundred?" Cop looks on the dash and says: "Your speedometer is in miles, you dummy!"

    • @stainlesssteellemming3885
      @stainlesssteellemming3885 8 місяців тому +9

      Yep, I remember that transition. I also remember having to master arithmetic using pounds, shillings and pence as well as dollars/cents.

    • @douglasfeilen4344
      @douglasfeilen4344 8 місяців тому +17

      I am an Australian. I was doing my Fitting & Machining apprenticeship at the time we were going metric. I was so grateful,much simpler & less opportunity for error. GO METRIC!

    • @georgegiagios4521
      @georgegiagios4521 8 місяців тому +8

      ​@@zyamadeadborn1785I had a similar experience in England years ago.i hired a little Vauxhall in London for a trip to Oxford. We drove along the motorway with me complaining about the little piece of s@#t we hired - screaming its head of just doing 100. As we flew past Jaguars and BMWs I looked more closely at the speedometer ... MPH.

    • @ComboMuster
      @ComboMuster 8 місяців тому +5

      @@douglasfeilen4344 spoken like a true craftsman.

  • @LorentzInvariance
    @LorentzInvariance 8 місяців тому +121

    This was the most well written content you ever produced. Straight up, 6 minutes of giggling. I guess base 60 won’t be going anywhere anytime soon.

    • @sylviam6535
      @sylviam6535 8 місяців тому +2

      The French wanted to make everything based on 100 (time, angles), but it did not take.

    • @AndersJackson
      @AndersJackson 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@sylviam653510 day week was not approved by workers. Except priests, who had tre more free day between preaching. 😂

    • @konstantinbodin9936
      @konstantinbodin9936 8 місяців тому

      You call it that way but yet, you divide by 10. To got 60system nomber you need 51 diferent symbol after nomber 9. Same in hexadecimal, no 10 is A, so you are stil in decad system because you count 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, 10(and that is decad system because you repeat 0 from the beginingand 1 is moved just one place to represent it) and first nomber in second "stage" (to simplefie litle) is nomber from begining 0, and next is 1... and ading representation of "stage" its 11. So we all operate in decad, computers do in binary 0,1... nomber 10 is 1010 nine is 1001...

    • @SomeKidsAtHomes
      @SomeKidsAtHomes 8 місяців тому

      because he litteraly copied the "Why I will NEVER use the Metric System" video

  • @pik33100
    @pik33100 19 годин тому

    6:12 - litres for the motor, inches for tires - even in Europe. Also, in Europe, inches are used for describe TV sets and computer monitors size.

  • @catey62
    @catey62 4 дні тому

    Aussie girl here, I grew up with imperial at school in my early years, then Australia switched to metric system in the early 70's. As someone who struggles with maths as well as being mildly dyslexic, I found the metric system so much easier to use and understand. I did love your humorous take on things though, and can see both sides to the story.

  • @TanyaLairdCivil
    @TanyaLairdCivil 8 місяців тому +288

    The irony is the US already has switched to metric, we did a long time ago. The formal definition of an inch is EXACTLY 2.54 cm. In other words, the inch is already defined in terms of the metric system. And the same applies for all the "English" units we use. We're just running the metric system with a texture pack over top of it.

    • @StumpyNubs
      @StumpyNubs  8 місяців тому +67

      "The irony is the US already has switched to metric, we did a long time ago...." - Yes, that's what this video is all about :)

    • @TanyaLairdCivil
      @TanyaLairdCivil 8 місяців тому +12

      @@StumpyNubs True! I just find it interesting that even the units that are ostensibly still Imperial units are metric if you actually look up the precise definition of them.

    • @douglasclerk2764
      @douglasclerk2764 8 місяців тому +10

      I spent my early schooling using both the metric and the imperial system. I have been teaching physics since 1977 and find the metric (SI) system way easier. However when doing woodwork, every now & then I find myself thinking in inches - Imperial seems somehow to lend itself well to woodworking.

    • @bobalman
      @bobalman 8 місяців тому +18

      @@douglasclerk2764 Yep, good old 2x4s. You know those boards 3.5"x1.5"...

    • @Emily_M81
      @Emily_M81 8 місяців тому +10

      so you could say we're using the metric system with extra steps.

  • @brandy1262
    @brandy1262 8 місяців тому +237

    I’m retired now, but I still remember the horror of starting my first job and finding out everything was done in ‘imperial’ units. Virtually my entire education (in Canada) was done in metric, and by the time I finished university all day to day measurements were in metric units. However, all my company’s customers were US, and all requirements were in imperial units, well that is to say US measurements as they were a bit different than the British measurements we used to use - just to make it even more messed up. Now that I am retired and dabbling in a bit of woodworking, I tend to stay with the US units as that’s what all the tools are. However, I am seriously considering just going all metric for future projects, I think once I get started, I will never look back.
    And in some ways the USA is fully metric. A inch is defined as exactly 2.54 cm and a pound is exactly 0.45359237 kg. All non metric measurements are actually defined precisely to their metric counter part, and it is the metric measurement that is related to some fundamental physical constant.

    • @thothtahuti5509
      @thothtahuti5509 8 місяців тому +4

      Well said, sir :)

    • @ChrisSudlik
      @ChrisSudlik 8 місяців тому +5

      A screw called out in a design with a British thread type threw off the work cells at one of my past jobs brutally, given that even the British mostly stopped using them ages ago.

    • @timosdinkydetailing
      @timosdinkydetailing 8 місяців тому +4

      Using Imperial measure is the best way to do construction framing, that's why you do it. You can do a thought experiment on how you would design a metric plywood size and measure out evenly spaced joists to match it. Imperial plywood is eight feet tall. Same as the floor to ceiling hight. The four foot wide sheet can also be framed perfectly with either 12", 16", or 24" spacing. I think, if there wasn't an imperial measurement system, there would be no frame houses at all. Like in Europe.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn 8 місяців тому

      I have never bought wood that was in metric dimensions. Using the metric system on wood that is cut in imperial dimensions doesn't make any sense to me.

    • @russellhorsefield9199
      @russellhorsefield9199 8 місяців тому +1

      To this day I still can not understand British Withworth but I would like to learn before I pass away.

  • @Oddman1980
    @Oddman1980 2 місяці тому +3

    I bought a brand new motorcycle last year. It's made by Harley-Davidson... and it shows the displacement in CC's.
    As someone who spends a lot of time making technical drawings, I really wish we could switch to metric.

  • @zackeryhardy9504
    @zackeryhardy9504 7 місяців тому +7

    I personally find that I use both systems almost equally. While the metric does conversions better, the metric system has 1 issue. Which is dividing by 3. The beauty of the imerial system for measuring construction distances is due to the fact that its a system based on 12. 12 can be divided by 2, 3, and 6. This is a lot more useful when doing generalized layout for things like equially distancing things as you have more units of measurements to work with. While most people are used to dividing by 10, I honestly think a system based on 12 is actually a lot more versitile when you fully commit to it. But that being said, the metric system is far better for projects that are under a few inches. The metric system is better and going small through conversions, but sometimes if I want to work referentially halving continuously is better for eyeballing.
    While I may have defended the imerial system more than mentioning how good the metric system is, I will point out that there is a video above already mentioning that and simply basing things off of 10 is just really useful. But so is basing things on 12. Why force yourself to use 1 system when you can seamlessly take advantage of both system's advantages.

    • @timexyemerald6290
      @timexyemerald6290 4 місяці тому

      Well. Thats only one advantage. The advantages of using Metric is clearly far more than using Imperial

    • @zackeryhardy9504
      @zackeryhardy9504 4 місяці тому

      @@timexyemerald6290 Why not use both? It's like a rich guy choosing between a truck and a mini van. Just use both for the task they each excel at.

    • @gtvgranberg
      @gtvgranberg 13 днів тому

      Make your thing 12cm, problem solved! Or 24 or 48 cm or mm or m. Any 12 multiple

    • @HieronymusChockvivantvanit
      @HieronymusChockvivantvanit 5 днів тому

      I always thought we should use base 12 instead of base 10.

  • @onesadtech
    @onesadtech 8 місяців тому +189

    Up here in Canada we officially use metric, but you will still find a lot of imperial units around as well. Monitors and and Tv screens are measured in inches, and you will very rarely find someone who will give their height in CM, almost always feet and inches. The weirdest thing to me though is wheel/tire sizes. Wheels are measured in inches, so tire sizes will be partially metric, and partially imperial, with a ratio of one of them thrown in there for good measure.
    215/60R16 means the tire is 215mm wide, with a sidewall that is 60% of 215mm, and it fits on a wheel that is 16 inches in diameter and about 6.5 inches wide, but then the offset of the wheel is MM again. It makes perfect sense if you don't think about it at all. 😂

    • @captainunderpants936
      @captainunderpants936 8 місяців тому +2

      Same in SA

    • @OnlyOnePlaylist
      @OnlyOnePlaylist 8 місяців тому +10

      Haha the tire thing is also in Europe. I don't own a car but the same issue occurs for bicycles, such a pain

    • @GolfWangMedia-incorporated
      @GolfWangMedia-incorporated 8 місяців тому +1

      Same as UK but we use also use imperial for the roads and car speed

    • @emgriffiths1861
      @emgriffiths1861 8 місяців тому +1

      Yeah a bit of a mess, I had to fill out an application for a licence and it asked for my height and I filled it in, they sent it back as I didn't specify feet inches or meter/cm I wonder if they thought I was over 5 meters tall ?

    • @jamesnasmith984
      @jamesnasmith984 8 місяців тому +2

      Dividing by 2 (repeatedly) rather than by 10 may be a matter of taste but the endlessly changing intervals between adjacent denominations of magnitude is a royal pain to memorize; 12 in/ ft, 3 ft/yard, 1760 yd/mile. Worse; US quarts and gallons are smaller than Imperial versions.

  • @UtubeEric12345
    @UtubeEric12345 8 місяців тому +153

    I love that I, as a Swedish bought up in the metric system, took almost the entire video to notice that he has a Sjöberg workbench. Sjöberg is an incredible swedish name, and the bench is most probably also very metric. That beein said, we sometimes actually use inches for our lumber. So I guess the imperial to inch conversion goes both ways =D

    • @nilsdock
      @nilsdock 8 місяців тому +24

      inches in Swedish lumber is usually slur for the things that are actually measures in mm.
      the Swedish 2 by 3 is actually 45x70 mm.
      what I mean to say is that inches exists in the language but not in the measurements.

    • @sm3ttz
      @sm3ttz 8 місяців тому +5

      Don't forget that not many years ago we bought 4 inch nails.. Now they are 100mm nails

    • @drops2cents260
      @drops2cents260 8 місяців тому +15

      @@sm3ttz Well, as an Austrian, I always bought nails in millimeter lengths - except for Nine Inch Nails, of course... 🙂

    • @douglashaag1127
      @douglashaag1127 8 місяців тому +2

      Good to learn that you are "a Swedish" and not "a Swede". That will be valuable information so I don't embarrass myself if I meet someone from Sweden. I guess that means someone from your neighboring country would be a "Danish" and not a "Dane".

    • @leifclaesson2470
      @leifclaesson2470 8 місяців тому

      Don't trust him on that @@douglashaag1127 :). I am very much Swedish myself, but I'm also a Swede. ;)

  • @henryirvine7964
    @henryirvine7964 15 днів тому

    The writing for this video is insanely good and only made better by the calm dry delivery of so many of the jokes which you use to connect between each of the real serious points you bring up, phenominal.

  • @queeg6473
    @queeg6473 18 днів тому

    UK here. I use both systems, depending on which is closest and which is easier to remember at the time.

  • @Jack_Dab
    @Jack_Dab 8 місяців тому +46

    "10 dollars in the average Americans saving account", outstanding move!

  • @MrTygerwhyte
    @MrTygerwhyte 8 місяців тому +196

    As a Canadian who grew up using Imperial measurements and then had to learn to convert to Metric, it wasn't hard to do. I use both systems interchangeably.

    • @MegaNardman
      @MegaNardman 8 місяців тому

      Yes, but you have to remember that the (median)average American isn't that smart, and half of the rest are dumber than that.

    • @yfelwulf
      @yfelwulf 8 місяців тому +3

      Same here I was at school when Australia changed

    • @paulwujek5208
      @paulwujek5208 8 місяців тому +5

      There is always the issue of things that were made with the imperial system are easier to deal with in that system. My house was built in 1958 which means that all rooms, doorways and other features are sized using whole imperial numbers - when dealing with that it is easier to stay in imperial than to convert to metric. I have eight foot ceilings, 28 inch wide doors, 3 foot wide staircases, etc.

    • @Quince828
      @Quince828 8 місяців тому +2

      And yet the grocers still package and advertise meat in pounds instead of 454 g. And 20 degrees still seems colder than 61

    • @mxh5647
      @mxh5647 8 місяців тому +2

      Although plywood measurements can be a bit of a pain. Isn't 3/4" ply slightly undersized?

  • @novacolonel5287
    @novacolonel5287 18 днів тому

    The most fun (well, it's in the top 100) I had in my life was when my german friends and I got a can of tomato soup in Canada that had 368ml, 5 US fluid ounces and 4.3 imperial fluid ounces or something like that on the label.
    Our soup cans usually have 800 ml, which coincidentally is 800 g.

  • @KennethScharf
    @KennethScharf 28 днів тому

    Don't think I'll ever feel comfortable thinking about room temperature (or outside air temp) in anything but F. Ditto for speed of my car. However, the field of 3D printing and CAD has been metric for quite some time, and I don't measure these parts in "inches". Cooking recipes are STILL in teaspoons, tablespoons, and oz's. Gas used to be sold in liters until the parts for setting pumps for gas prices over $1/gallon! HFT has VERY FEW tape measures in metric! Ditto for other tool makers btw.

  • @danadcock9743
    @danadcock9743 8 місяців тому +180

    I believe that in the 1960s there was a big push in the USA to switch the metric system which was quashed by the Society of Automotive Engineers. I think that is fascinating since, as you pointed out, American cars are now mostly metric.

    • @Raggzzaug11
      @Raggzzaug11 8 місяців тому +20

      Wish we had,I would't need two tool boxes.

    • @bretsk2500
      @bretsk2500 8 місяців тому +5

      The last fastener I saw on an American vehicle was my 1988 chevy pickup... the only SAE bolts left that I know of are the 3/8-16 bolts in a side terminal battery.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 8 місяців тому +2

      I very much doubt the resistance was at the behest of the SAE, since American automakers are one of the few industries in USA to fairly thoroughly switch to metric.

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om 8 місяців тому +5

      @@tookitogo I really wish they had! I had a boat shop in the 1990's. New Mercury (and OMC) outboards with legs and gearboxes built in 'murica were imperial and the powerheads (built in Japan) were metric. BLOODY ANNOYING!

    • @carloscollomps1552
      @carloscollomps1552 8 місяців тому +5

      It's annoying how some american cars have mixed imperial/metric fasteners/bolts, like my 1988 S-10.

  • @greenbimoon
    @greenbimoon 8 місяців тому +28

    Already metric and loving it!
    Love how it's so transferable through the other units, e.g. 10cm cube is a litre of water. Which is a kg.
    Oh, and science uses it, SI

  • @astranger448
    @astranger448 Місяць тому

    I worked as a European exchange student in a Californian machine shop in 1984. The machinists on the shop floor were customary to a man. The engineers in the drawing office preferred translating from customary to metric, do the numbers then translate back into customary. They considered it faster and much less prone to error. I am still fairly bilingual in the simpler stuff, a lot of customary translates easily enough into metric especially with a bit of 'about' applied where safe to do so.

  • @thebamfordman
    @thebamfordman 10 днів тому

    In the U.K. we use both. It's not confusing and it's great to be able to "talk" both languages.
    We have millions of Victorian houses that were built in Imperial.
    By the way, we only turned metric on currency in 1971, still serve pints in bars and ALL of our road distances are Imperial by law.
    Woodworking wise, we buy materials that are in mm but actually are Imperial boards/planks/joists etc that have been converted to metric.
    I use both in one piece of wood, when it's convenient!

  • @ioGLNX
    @ioGLNX 8 місяців тому +68

    It's funny because here in Germany we always use the metric system but on our rulers we also had the inches (we call it Zoll which translates customs) . It was very confusing for us some of us back then. But we also got in touch with it back then.

    • @flybywire5866
      @flybywire5866 8 місяців тому +4

      While we generally use metric in germany, things like plumbing or car rims or tv screens use inches.

    • @Wildschwien
      @Wildschwien 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@flybywire5866Selling screens only it imperial however is not legal. Same with using PS or horsepowers for the power of sth. Imperial should be finally replaced everywhere.

    • @vomKuckucksfelsen
      @vomKuckucksfelsen 8 місяців тому +5

      The german word "Zoll" was written "Zol" back in the Days and was always a unit of measurement. "Zoll" also means "customs" but that comes from the latin word "telonium" which describes the Place you had to pay customs to continue your journey.

    • @shadowmancy9183
      @shadowmancy9183 8 місяців тому

      @@Wildschwien I have no idea how PS works for horsepower- I know 50hp is a nice amount on a bike, but is 50PS more or less, and by how much? Same with torque- 50ft-lbs is enough for a smaller bike, but is 50Nm more or less, and by how much? There's just not a sense of scale when it comes to the practical things.

    • @Wildschwien
      @Wildschwien 8 місяців тому +1

      @@shadowmancy9183 PS is Pferdestärke (horsepower) in Germany. However this is not the same as the unit hp I think. We don't use lps as well.

  • @dennisonseeto
    @dennisonseeto 8 місяців тому +97

    Here in Australia the older generation like my father, were brought up on the imperial system. So I know how hard it is to change from something that was taught from a young age.
    But it does make me laugh when my dad has to add up 5ft 9 53/64th in + 3ft 7/16th in + 9ft 3/32 in , and all I have to do is 1774mm + 926mm +2822mm 🙂

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om 8 місяців тому +13

      I grew up with imperial, and had to change to metric. Best move EVER! How much does 1 litre of water weigh? 1 kilogram. It's just so much easier than trying to convert volume of water to mass, then dividing it by the number you first thought of... And aircraft, filled up in pounds of fuel. You've got to be shitting me! (and yes, I'm fully aware of why they use pounds!)

    • @oleksandrbespalov9713
      @oleksandrbespalov9713 8 місяців тому +1

      As the author of the video said, you're just afraid of fractions 😅

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om 8 місяців тому

      @@oleksandrbespalov9713 Americans are SO lazy that not only do they refuse to learn the metric system, they can't even see why it's so much better. Which does surprise me in a way. Don't you lazy people see that by using metric you can be even lazier? Go metric, no more fractions! (BTW, fractions don't worry me in the slightest. And I do know that the lowest common denominator for americans not going to metric is that they are stupid.)

    • @nevillesevicke-jones1227
      @nevillesevicke-jones1227 8 місяців тому +3

      And.... are you using short (US) tons or long tons? And gallons...( remember them?)...US gall==3.8 litres.. a standard gallon 4.55 l

    • @dannynysus
      @dannynysus 8 місяців тому +1

      🙀 oh noes, pwease wescue me fwom da scawy fwactions 😭

  • @joepangean6770
    @joepangean6770 29 днів тому

    As a retired physical scientist I always used the metric system and thus very familiar. So as a woodworker I can adapt to using all metric in projects. The only difficulty is the rest of the wood industry does not share the same idea. Wood is still measured, priced in board feet, project plans are still mostly in inches/feet and tools, especially router bits, saw blades and drill bits/gauges are in fractions of inches. More metric versions of tools are joining mainstream thanks to Festool, Makita etc. Example is the MFT table with 20 mm dog holes although UA-cam tutorials that make jigs, tables and benches use 3/4 inch bits to make the dog holes. I think the biggest example of mismatch comes from dimensions of sheet goods. The industry sells sheet goods as 1/4, 1/2, 3/4 inch thickness but none of them are correct since the are in millimeters. This is a major frustration of new wood workers who layout dados, mortises and rabbits only to discover the corresponding plywood doesn't fit. Enough already, lets move to complete metric and work more efficiently.

  • @willschmit436
    @willschmit436 19 днів тому

    I use both. I design parts in the computer with MMS. I brew beer with grams of ingredients, but gallons of water. I adhere to the road laws in MPH. I did a project (construction) with some Aussies. Their blue prints are all metric (whether building something the size of a thimble, or the size of a stadium)...

  • @xof-woodworkinghobbyist
    @xof-woodworkinghobbyist 8 місяців тому +341

    Funnily enough, I was born, raised and educated in the metric system (I am from France), and yet, when I work in my workshop, I primarily used the imperial system. I found the fractions fun to use... That said, who cares what system you use as long as you have fun building stuff.

    • @saxus
      @saxus 8 місяців тому +12

      Oh those fraction thing drives me crazy.

    • @BoraHorzaGobuchul
      @BoraHorzaGobuchul 8 місяців тому +12

      As the Russian saying goes, "monsieur is a connoisseur of perversion" (used as a praise of sorts)

    • @TruFrag
      @TruFrag 8 місяців тому +6

      It does matter when it comes to compatibility between projects and sometimes even within the current project its self.

    • @mattsutube
      @mattsutube 8 місяців тому +7

      It's only fun when you're dealing with the easy conversions of the metric system. I'm Done struggling with Imperial.

    • @yfelwulf
      @yfelwulf 8 місяців тому +7

      SI Metric is Universal (French Metric is as you say different) all the units are related 1mm x10 = 1 cm x 100 = 1 meter. 1 cubic cm of water = 1 millilitre that weighs 1 gram x 1000 = 1 liter then 1000 liters equals 1 metric ton or 2200 lb. America is making its self irrelevant by maintaining a system that no one else uses anymore. I was at school when Australia went from British Imperial to Metric. Remember US and UK are not compatible being different scales. ie 1 UK gallon us 4.5 liters one US Gallon is 3.9 liters even the inch is a different scale.

  • @andypre1667
    @andypre1667 8 місяців тому +25

    Weirdly enough, the rigid but foldable device for measuring, usually made from wood, is called a "Zollstock" in German, literally "inch stick". A "Zoll" was a cut off piece of wood with a thickness of about 2 thumbs, whereas 12 Zoll made 1 Fuß, or foot. But then a Zoll varied between 2.5 cm in Hesse and 3.7662 cm in Prussia, with Baden and Switzerland (where 10 Zoll made a Fuß) somewhere in between. We also had miles, varying from 7500 to 9000 m, or between 12000 and 24000 Fuß in other places. All in all, the metric system is a good thing...

    • @zbnmth
      @zbnmth 8 місяців тому +2

      Dutch has the same, "duimstok" (thumb stick). Except it's becoming an archaïc word (since it's becoming an unused tool) and we'd use a "rolmaat" (rolling measure) way more often.

    • @SimplySketchyXbox
      @SimplySketchyXbox 8 місяців тому

      The French used to define a foot as the literal measurement from the Kings foot.

    • @FabioCapela
      @FabioCapela 8 місяців тому +4

      And this shows why standardization was truly needed. Even before the SI came along, what we now know as imperial units were only ever used in the British Empire; other places had different measurements that, to make things more confusing, often shared the same names but not the same measurements.

    • @durandalgmx7633
      @durandalgmx7633 8 місяців тому +1

      @@zbnmth duimstok and rolmaat arte different things. Duimstok is rigid and still quite handy.

    • @durandalgmx7633
      @durandalgmx7633 8 місяців тому +2

      @@lurch789no it's not. It's the same. your (?) imperial system is just one of the many and evolving imperial systems that are/were out there. That is the whole point. There was no standard, until Napoleon and his metric came along and made it all standardised and simpler.
      Today the US Imperial system is officially defined by the metric system.

  • @locomokko
    @locomokko 2 місяці тому

    Hi james, This is a topic that hits close to home. As a kid, I grew up in the US, and everything around me was "imperial", save for the occasional science lesson. When I was in about 5th grade, that was around the time the push that Carter made to switch to metric made its way to classrooms. I genuinely think the lessons were intentionally convoluted to make people not want to switch to metric. Because, fast forward to a few years later, I left the US in my late 20's (almost 35 years ago now), and slowly "adapted" to metric. First out of necessity, then I kind of became "bilingual" for a long while. Then I started doing a lot of DIY and creeping into woodworking projects, and as I got there I though "Why the HELL would anyone not want to use metric"? I returned to the US to help a friend of mine with renovation of his house that had been flooded and damaged. I had to go and buy tape measures that were metric. His Rubi Tile saw was imperial, I just ignored it and did everything in metric. Had to get a T-Square that was dual. But it comes down to this... on a tape measure with all these tiny marks... I still look and go "What's bigger, 7/8ths or 9/16ths". Now that may make me sound like a moron, but I can tell you this... there is no doubt in my mind when I see 238mm and 232mm as to which is bigger. Not to mention where to find it on the bloody ruler. I have since lived in Australia, the UK (they are weird too... not really fully metric as the roads are still signed in miles per hour for speed, but km for distance!? And gasoline is sold in liters, but the tanks are measured in Imperial Gallons (bigger than the "US gallon"), Singapore, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Japan and the Maldives (and by iived, spent at least 1 year there). I've been in Japan now for more than 15 years. Point here is, don't fight metric. Smartest thing I ever took up. Just took some time to "leave behind" the old ways. I would NEVER go back now. Metric just makes too much sense. (And you still have fractions if you REALLY want in metric, like 235 1/2mm or better stated 235.5mm... see where this is going? Scott from Japan

  • @markantony3875
    @markantony3875 26 днів тому

    I have worked in Engineering in the U.S. for the past 30 years. We always design everything with metric measurements from the get go.

  • @jonc5152
    @jonc5152 8 місяців тому +27

    The inch was re-sized and defined as 2.54cm very early in the 20th century. Although, I think it was "officially" set as such in 1959. For the most part, all the precision work in the industrial age has been on an inch that is really metric in disguise

    • @thomasherrin6798
      @thomasherrin6798 8 місяців тому +1

      All the precision work in the Industrial age was done by Imperial fractions!?!

    • @mRw0oK
      @mRw0oK 7 місяців тому

      lol , you wanted to say: precision work was mostly done by metric, especially in the last 100 years almost exlusively :D imagine bulding a CPU with imperial :D

    • @kjelllindberg6987
      @kjelllindberg6987 13 днів тому

      That was due to the difference between the US customary units INCH and the imperial INCH, then both systems agreed on a INCH being exactly 25.4mm long...

  • @DariushMolavi
    @DariushMolavi 8 місяців тому +178

    As an engineer, I love this 😂

    • @DuffyHomoHabilis
      @DuffyHomoHabilis 8 місяців тому +13

      Absolutely!! Engineering calcs are SO much easier in metric!!!!!

    • @SteelheadTed
      @SteelheadTed 8 місяців тому +13

      As a structural engineer I hate it. Whenever performing a calculation it is imperative to have a gut check on whether it is a reasonable answer. If I’m expecting an answer in a certain range of pounds, I know what that means. The standard unit system is my first language. It would take years to attain that same gut feel in Newtons. I would always be converting back to standard units.
      An engineers gut feel for an answer is critical.

    • @pashahart8698
      @pashahart8698 8 місяців тому +5

      Explains why there are so many bridge issues engineer......

    • @conrat2000
      @conrat2000 8 місяців тому +3

      I think @SteelheadTed got it right for a lot of us. I took have a hard time visualizing metric units and am comfortable with imperial units. I end up converting to double check myself.

    • @Shin_Lona
      @Shin_Lona 8 місяців тому +4

      Yeah, but I already use metric for engineer related functions... It's everything else that I'm worried about.
      Do you really wanna use Celsius? You lose resolution when making important decisions like if it's going to be warm enough to wear shorts or not.
      KPH? Think about the speeding tickets.
      Officer: "Do you have any idea how fast you were going?"
      Me: "No, I do not."

  • @danmoreton1788
    @danmoreton1788 3 місяці тому +1

    For me it has been a gradual process of not trying to convert mm into inches. Now I start out thinking in mm. My tools are in mm and so are my nuts, bolts and drill bits.

  • @rogerkant3696
    @rogerkant3696 7 днів тому

    Coming from a metric country (Australia), I am always amused when you find legacy imperial measurements left behind in the woodworking and engineering disciplines, most prevalent are in threads where imperial threads persist and sometimes are as common as our new metric M6 bolts. Our big box hardware still stocks both after decades in the metric system. The legacy of things that come just happen to come in 254mm (10 inches) is hilarious. Random fact, in the UK they still show miles on road signs for distance and speed limits.

  • @MattMuirhead
    @MattMuirhead 8 місяців тому +26

    I made the switch to metric for all 'fine woodworking' projects from the start. All of my tapes, squares and straight edges are metric or dual measurement. I added a Wixey digital rule / gauge on my table saws and planer and keep a nice Mitutoyo caliper at the ready. I still reference approximates in imperial and use it for larger projects like cabinets or home repair just because most appliance schematics and accessories use imperial, but my life is loads easier using metric.

  • @johno9507
    @johno9507 8 місяців тому +39

    As a Aussie with an American mother I grew up confused as hell with measurements, on top of that I often failed my spelling tests because I leave the U out of color...I mean colour.
    Now I fix metric Airbus aircraft in the morning and Imperial Boeing's in the afternoon. 🙄🇦🇺

    • @houtdraaien7103
      @houtdraaien7103 2 місяці тому +2

      Now it is clear why the Boeing's are falling apart

  • @dudesweetpro
    @dudesweetpro 10 днів тому

    Im a product designer and can use both inches and mm for length to design easily. Go between, use fraction on the inch stuff I know all the decimals to the 16th off my head. But aside from psi I’m pretty much using all other units or combinations of units in metric

  • @scottsellers9039
    @scottsellers9039 5 місяців тому +1

    I'm 60. I learned the metric system in junior high because "America is going to switch to the metric system". That was the late 70s! What has really happened is that in mechanics one must have both SAE and Metric! Ironically i went into the medical field where we ONLY use metric measurements. Metric? Bring it on baby! I'm ready!

  • @wimvandenbosch6657
    @wimvandenbosch6657 8 місяців тому +36

    In South Africa we changed from imperial to metric in the mid 1960. I use both. Although metric is easier for calculating engineering subjects. My biggest downfall is I love to bake bread. Blows my brain when the recipes use cups , ounces , lbs etc. so much easier when it’s all in grams , litres and millilitres. 👍👍. We enjoy your videos.

    • @seanseoltoir
      @seanseoltoir 8 місяців тому +10

      And if you look at it a bit closer, you need to realize that there are US cups (fluid=236.5882365 ml, dry=275.305235679 ml), Imperial cups (284.130625 ml), metric cups (250 ml), Canadian cups (227.3045 ml), etc... And there is also the issue that US cups are further divided into dry cups or fluid cups, which most people don't realize the difference and end up using the wrong measuring device for the type of cup that the recipe is requiring... Then again, you have no guarantee that the original creator of the recipe used the right measuring device either... And then there is the FDA "nutritional cup"... Might as well say, "a smidgen of this and a dash of that" for the recipe... :(

    • @bskbishop
      @bskbishop 8 місяців тому +8

      Metric recipes tend to be measured by weight, and imperial by volume. For ANY kind of bread or pastry, the ratios are critical to get right, and measuring by weight is SO much easier and more accurate. I definitely prefer metric for bread, and other baked goods.

    • @dappermuis5002
      @dappermuis5002 8 місяців тому

      I was born 16 years after the change over. Pretty much everything I do is in Metric except baking. I agree Teaspoons, and cups are so much easier for me, though I use metric on things like the butter as it is easier to carve off blocks knowing how much is needed without having to weigh the darn stuff. I grew up using cups and spoons, also most recipes are from old cook books, WAY older than me. Also when dyslexic and one gets things wrong on a calculator, having to whip out a scale just to measure what would have been 4 teaspoons of something in the old way of measuring is just rediculous. If using a scoop, when you figure it out, you still have to convert back to how many scoops needed that are measured in teaspoons anyway!

    • @trystdodge6177
      @trystdodge6177 8 місяців тому +1

      And look at south Africa now. Great reason to NEVER entertain the idea of switching to metric.

    • @DigiLab360
      @DigiLab360 8 місяців тому +2

      The metric system in South Africa has been tremendously useful for measuring the level of corruption in the government.

  • @Puggy42069
    @Puggy42069 7 місяців тому +19

    I already have gone metric as an American. I’ve been criticized by some people in public for using millimeters and centimeters when describing the length of something’s.

  • @chuckhall5347
    @chuckhall5347 18 днів тому

    I'm a 60 year old American. I bought a metric tape measure to do some finish carpentry. It was awesome. Only one unit of measure, millimeters. Can you actually cut a board to 78 and 17/32nds of an inch? I work on cars once in a while so of course I own two sets of wrenches.

  • @battle66
    @battle66 8 місяців тому +47

    I grew up in Singapore where we uses Metric. Watching and reading imperial is just about another measuring systems. Hence no big deal. Now a days smart phone are so convenient and conversion is just a click away.
    What I felt really challenging is baking, where Cups and spoons were used rather than weight and volume which is much easier to follow. This is personal. 😊

    • @RoryIsNotACabbage
      @RoryIsNotACabbage 8 місяців тому +3

      A cup is also different depending on who you ask
      Volumetric measurements need to go

    • @pacman10182
      @pacman10182 8 місяців тому +1

      @@RoryIsNotACabbage I'd never get any cooking if I had to weigh everything

    • @kennith.nielsen
      @kennith.nielsen 8 місяців тому +3

      Old recipes actually use cups and spoons in Denmark. The problem is that they don't all have the same size. Son of you have a big cup and a small spoon, you might mess it up if you're not an experienced baker. Using grams, centiliters and deciliters (one tenth of a liter) you get the same result every time.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 8 місяців тому +5

      @@RoryIsNotACabbage When dealing with powders such as flour the volume for a given mass changes depending on how tightly it's packed. For this reason professional bakers always measure by weight, never by volume. Also IIRC, US bakers use metric, not imperial.

    • @Antinous99
      @Antinous99 8 місяців тому +3

      Another advantage of using metric (weight) instead of cups and spoons is that there are less dishes to wash. Put one bowl on the scale and add the ingredients.

  • @Stef-in-the-Philippines
    @Stef-in-the-Philippines 8 місяців тому +69

    Dear Mr Nubs -- Thank you for your always valuable, always informative woodworking videos. We have all learned much from you. We also love your style of delivery and humor.
    Three years before I retired, intending to move to the Philippines, I decided to switch from US measurements to metric -- especially for temperature (weather) and distance (driving). My digital thermometer happily accomated me with a flip of the switch on the back side. (My Volvo, however, stayed locked in miles.)
    In the woodshop, a surprise! My Stanley tape measure already spoke metric. Never noticed that before, except when it got in the way.
    Here's my beef --
    When my almost 70 yo eyes look down on the tape measure, I can easily see the markings for sixteenths, eighths, quarter inches, etc. The length of the dash at the edge of the tape makes it easy to determine.
    The metric side (and my other metric-only measures) shows each mark with a dash of the same length, except for the half centimeter dash which is longer. Problem is, the mm marks are closer together than sixteenths. And with my astigmatism and trifocal lenses it's really hard to tell the difference between 86 mm and 87 mm or 42 and 43 and so on. Dashes of different lengths make the Inches measurements easier to read.
    Still, I persevere -- taking my glasses off and getting right down on the ruler when precise metric measurements are needed, which is to say constantly.
    Please use your 'influence' to persuade metric measurement instrument providers to adopt gradations in their dashes. Picture one span of a suspension bridge for guidance, from short dashes at the beginning to the long dash in the middle, then shortening down again until the next centimeter.
    Thank you very much, Mr. Nubs. You are doing every metric user over the age of 40 a great service.

    • @w00dw0rks101
      @w00dw0rks101 8 місяців тому +4

      I like your thoughts on this. They align exactly with my experience here in Canada.

    • @mrshahcloud
      @mrshahcloud 8 місяців тому +2

      You could try to convert what you're trying to build in increments of 5mm sir.

    • @kanukkarhu
      @kanukkarhu 8 місяців тому +1

      This is a really great point - the dashes in a metric tape are all the same length and it is harder to see which exact one you need. I often need to count the ticks with my pencil.
      Excellent point. 👍🇨🇦

    • @Cenedd
      @Cenedd 8 місяців тому +2

      I think the Starrett rules (and probably others) are graduated with different length marks that might help...although that's not a tape, admittedly. Personally I always hated rules graduated in half millimetres - those have always been prone to visual tracking errors. I always tried to find scales that were only in full millimetres...but to be honest, now I'm looking for them that are only graduated every 2mm! Ahh the joys of increasing years of experience!

    • @brettmasek9453
      @brettmasek9453 8 місяців тому +2

      As a barely over 40 woodworker, I resemble your remark. Begrudgingly. How fast our eyes go...

  • @duncanjames914
    @duncanjames914 17 днів тому

    I'm of the vintage that I started my life with the Imperial measurement system then switched to Metric in 1969 in school. It's like being bilingual. We pretty much think in both systems and still use them. Building materials are purchased in Imperial units. 2x4s, 4x8 sheets and so on and so forth. However, a can of paint is usually a US gallon and measures 3.78 litres versus an Imperial gallon which is 4.5 litres. Lots of fun!

  • @JamesKirk1988
    @JamesKirk1988 Місяць тому

    I design custom furniture/cabinetry, and my CAD software changes between inches and mm with the push of a button. When we go to "Spec" a part, everything is converted to mm, and any spec notes to the factory have to be given in mm. This is in Florida.

  • @jacquelineraner14
    @jacquelineraner14 8 місяців тому +52

    Went totally metric when about 2 years ago when I finally changed to Celsius because I did a total immersion language so I could feel comfortable in my second language. The hardest part of that was actually the fact that I needed to convert the speed and distances for when I described a road trip because I was so ueed to giving location as being the amount of time it took to get there not taking into account that I was telling that to someone was using the Autobahn which made something like its an hour away from Chicago a meaningless statement.😅

    • @aixtom979
      @aixtom979 8 місяців тому +7

      I'm just running in to the "X hours away" situation while planning a trip to Japan next year, where "an hour away" (while considering daytrips from my hotel) can be anything from 25km to 300km. ;-)

    • @davidsilvercreek8541
      @davidsilvercreek8541 7 місяців тому +1

      Celsius is not metric and is half as accurate as Fahrenheit, who cares when water freezes and boils at SEA LEVEL... Next, time is divided by 12....

    • @mRw0oK
      @mRw0oK 7 місяців тому +4

      @@davidsilvercreek8541 bro you can add decimals to celsius and it will be the same accuracy... accuracy is dependend of the Device you are using not the numbers that come out... you can even make you're own scale if you want... but you cant change the device and its accuracy to measure stuff

    • @davidsilvercreek8541
      @davidsilvercreek8541 7 місяців тому

      @@mRw0oKIf you use a big enough sling shot you can make a pig fly...

    • @mRw0oK
      @mRw0oK 7 місяців тому +4

      @@davidsilvercreek8541 you can throw sayings around as much as you like, in the end you cant argue with logic. But you wont understand because you dont even understand the conept of logic

  • @stefankoopmans2200
    @stefankoopmans2200 8 місяців тому +37

    I'm from the Netherlands, and If it wasn't for wheels, TV's, PC monitors and drivebays I'd probably never ever knew inches were a thing. It's kind of weird that we got so accustomed to the imperial system for certain devices. It was probably more convenient to stick with them as conversion would lead to even weirder numbers and more confusion.

    • @wishingb5859
      @wishingb5859 8 місяців тому +2

      Yes, nowadays there is no reason to do any conversions. Type how many inches is in a meter and Google or Siri or Bixby or Alexis answers - you don't even have to think at all.

    • @nerdzone
      @nerdzone 8 місяців тому

      @@wishingb5859 Yeah, I wonder how NASA did not figure that out in 1999. :)

  • @MrOffTrail
    @MrOffTrail Місяць тому

    I’m an American scientist, which means I use metric at work, and customary at home for some things. One advantage customary (aka Imperial) units that are base 12 have is there are more factors of 12 than of 10, so you can divide base 12 perfectly in more ways…for example, a third of a foot is exactly 4 inches, and a third of a yard is exactly one foot, but you cannot divide a meter in thirds without approximating. So it isn’t exactly one sided in favor of metric.
    Also, Fahrenheit is a base 10 unit system as well, it is just the end points are different than Celsius. And they make a lot of sense if you look at it from a practical perspective. The 0° mark is the temperature of a salt-ice bath. You might think that is random, but you can’t really calibrate a traditional thermometer with a solid block of ice. So even today, when calibrating we use a salt/crushed ice slush, because that gives you a stable temp you can put your thermometer in. If it is a Celsius thermometer, that’s calibrated to 17.777778°C (if you have a lab thermometer or calorimeter (you may see a red line or other marking at 17.7) …or if Fahrenheit, just 0°F. On the upper end, 100° is human body temperature, a handy and widely relevant temperature…except that unlike the French and their error, it was intentionally fudged just a bit (a little over one degree) so that the boiling and freezing points of water at sea level would have nice round numbers. But since normal human body temperature is an average and varies from person to person, it is still a good approximation.
    Bonus FYI: the aerospace industry, and NASA space flight engineers, use the Rankine temperature scale. It is based on the Fahrenheit scale, but is an absolute scale like Kelvin, ie 0R=0K, aka absolute zero being the lower bound.

  • @sixuk902
    @sixuk902 8 місяців тому +52

    Here in the UK we use both interchangeably, although I think imperial is becoming less common in the younger generation. I'll use imperial for my height, weight, distances and speed, but metric for almost everything else. I like the ease of halving, say, 4 & 3/8 inches by doubling the denominator, but for any precise measurement I'm just much more comfortable in mm

    • @sygad1
      @sygad1 8 місяців тому +2

      exactly the same, if we could just shake those last few

    • @dansmif
      @dansmif 8 місяців тому +3

      As a child of the 80s in Scotland, we only learned distances in metric, which is weird because we still use miles on our road signs. I just wish we'd hurry up and get rid of imperial measurements - we should have done it decades ago.

    • @newportshapwick
      @newportshapwick 8 місяців тому +3

      I'm happy using both at the same time. Carpets in the UK are often measured in feet in width, but metric in length! I tend to swap from one to the other depending on what I'm doing and which gives me the results in the quickest way to work out.

    • @louisc.gasper7588
      @louisc.gasper7588 8 місяців тому +1

      I understand you still price race horses in Guineas.

    • @jaapgoddijn
      @jaapgoddijn 8 місяців тому +1

      @@newportshapwick The carpets measures are hilarious! 😂
      Though I can understand how such a thing evolves in time.

  • @keitha.9788
    @keitha.9788 8 місяців тому +120

    In the early 1960's there was a serious effort to convert the U.S. to the metric system. I remember being in grade school during that time and was educated in the metric system for about 2 years. Then they abruptly stopped. Well, my later education as an engineer; physics and chemistry classes were all metric. It's like growing up learning 2 different languages at home. As an old man, I think and function equally well with either system............

    • @hamptonwoodturnings
      @hamptonwoodturnings 8 місяців тому +2

      I remember that too. I believe the powers at be during that time found it was too difficult to switch over using a bunch of grade school kids to do it, 😅

    • @noquedaniuno
      @noquedaniuno 8 місяців тому +13

      do to the vicinity, we use kind of a hybrid system here(Mexico). You get the chance to order materials(plywood, PVC pipe, etc) in Imperial but you make all your measurements in metric. To this day i still see some mechanics using SAE tools on recent cars... I stopped taking my car to those shops and had to learn some mechanical skills on the way, but seeing someone beat a 1/2" socket in a 13mm nut was a really hard pill to swallow -_-

    • @haqvor
      @haqvor 8 місяців тому +8

      That seem to coincide with the imperial system being redefined and based on the metric system in 1959. For example the definition of an inch is exactly 25.4 mm, and in turn the metric (or to be more precise the SI system) is based on measurements of physical phenomenon that can be very precisely measured.

    • @kwilliams2239
      @kwilliams2239 8 місяців тому +1

      @@haqvor No, it really has nothing to do with the rationalization of the imperial system. Politicians in the '60s thought they "knew more" than the mere riffraff and decided to push it down their throats. The people rejected it, soundly, so it went away. Mostly. Liquids are still sold in metric units but that's about all.
      People in the STEM fields use metric because it's, well, required. A lot of needed units don't exist in the FPS system and conversions are much more important. For 99% of the people, FPS works just fine. If our betters are going to try to force it again, expect the same results. A lot of people will be really pissed. I don't much care, except that I have a *lot* of imperial tools.

    • @stephendurnan3609
      @stephendurnan3609 8 місяців тому +4

      In the early 70's that called it 'think metric'.

  • @sisko212
    @sisko212 19 годин тому

    "The USA is switching to METRIC!" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 that is really, really, funny !!!!

  • @HieronymusChockvivantvanit
    @HieronymusChockvivantvanit 5 днів тому

    Plywood will always come in 4'x8' sheets. Studs will always be on 16" centers. Metric sockets will always be used with 1/4", 3/8", and 1/2" drivers.

  • @LeonMatthews
    @LeonMatthews 8 місяців тому +21

    It's nuts and bolts that motivates me the most. An M8x40 bolt is 8mm in diameter and its thread is 40mm long. It's easy to stock a good range of common values.

    • @Elder-Sage
      @Elder-Sage 8 місяців тому

      Just playing devil's advocate here but, it's not so different. A ½" x 2" bolt it one half inch in diameter by two inches long.
      You do have to pay attention to thread pitch also, but then again it's the same for metric for any bolt M8 or larger.

    • @dominicread797
      @dominicread797 8 місяців тому +3

      @@Elder-Sage You want to drill a hole to tap a #10 thread, so you use 5/32" drill bit, then realize you need another 4 thousandths clearance, so do you use a #20 drill bit, or a #21?
      This would all be so easy in metric.

    • @Elder-Sage
      @Elder-Sage 8 місяців тому +2

      @@dominicread797 Thread tapping introduces a whole other layer of calculations. If I want to tap a hole for a M8 bolt do you think you drill a 8mm hole? The answer is no. Depending on thread pitch, you'll have to drill 6.75mm, 7mm, 7.25mm, or 7.5mm.
      To answer your question the bit I would select would depend on the thread pitch (24 or 32 TPI) and also the hardness of the material (50% to 75% overlap). The bit could be anywhere between 18 to 25.
      *(also I think we can collective curse standards organizations who decided not to name things in size but an arbitrary gauge scales which is a layer of agitation wholly separate from the English vs Metric issue)*

    • @mr.thomas6128
      @mr.thomas6128 8 місяців тому

      @@Elder-Sage that is the beauty of the Metric bolt system. M8 thread is always has a 1.25mm pitch. Otherwise it will be denoted as what it actually has. Though at such small sizes I have never seen fine pitch. I have however seen things like M45x1.5, meaning an outside diameter of 45mm with a pitch of 1.5mm

    • @richardh50
      @richardh50 8 місяців тому

      Any metric thread which doesn’t have the pitch appended is metric coarse ( which is the standard ) to get the tapping drill size subtract the pitch from the major dia ( it’s near enough ) far easier than all the different US threads , UNC , UNF or UN-8 & as for the different strength grades !!

  • @scofield117
    @scofield117 8 місяців тому +36

    I’ve been using metric on personal projects for a while now. My only problem with using metric at work is that my metric tape measures seem to keep going missing off job sites, funny thing that.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 8 місяців тому +3

      In the UK I don't think I've ever seen a tape measure that doesn't have metric on one edge and imperial on the other edge.

    • @lottievixen
      @lottievixen 8 місяців тому

      ​@@barneylaurance1865same when I lived in Australia

    • @mckamey
      @mckamey 8 місяців тому +3

      Really strange they seem to walk of since they don’t have feet, unlike imperial tape measures.

    • @CelticAssassin
      @CelticAssassin 8 місяців тому

      That's all tools, sadly. Was doing a QA/QC job on a construction site for a while on Eglin AFB and we usually were there for all of about 4 hours. I left my surveyors tape that measures in tenths unattended for all of maybe 10 minutes and it was gone with the wind. Same happened to my hammer as well. Still miss that hammer.

    • @CelticAssassin
      @CelticAssassin 8 місяців тому

      ​@barneylaurance1865 That's pretty much standard. What's harder to find but far better in my opinion is one with tenths instead of inches. Tenths are simply and undeniably superior in every way.

  • @siamaklighvani3951
    @siamaklighvani3951 23 дні тому

    I was talking with an old American diesel engine mechanical engineer for the big ships and he said that English measurements like inches and its division is more accurate than the metric system . And from very old times the engine capacity and cutting cylinder head was based on British system .

  • @brentf3470
    @brentf3470 24 дні тому

    I'm in Canada and still do home renovations in imperial units. Drywall and plywood are 4x8 foot panels though the thickness is now mm. Studs are on 16 or 24 inch centres, tiles are in inches... I tried going metric but found it more difficult given the standards in construction that even 50 years after going metric are still imperial.
    For woodworking I use and prefer metric. I could tell I made the switch when I started converting to metric to visualize units. If someone says something is a foot I think "about 30 cm" now converting to metric in my head.

  • @CrestonParker
    @CrestonParker 8 місяців тому +90

    Great video! I have always lived in the U.S., but I have been building all of my projects in Metric since the 90's because it is so much easier to use, especially if you need to use a calculator to divide anything into multiple measurements. When people tell me the Metric System is tough to learn, I ask them how many inches are in a mile. Most of them can't even tell me how many feet are in a mile. Then I ask them how many teaspoons are in a gallon. All good fun. Woodworking in Metrics is so much easier. Give it a try. It's a pretty quick transition, but so worth it. Thanks for the great content!

    • @ethanwheeler3323
      @ethanwheeler3323 8 місяців тому +7

      Fair point, but to play devil's advocate...have you ever actually needed to know how may inches are in a mile? Or teaspoons in a gallon? To be fair, that's not exactly practical info to know. Metric is extremely easy, for sure. But overall I find it easier to work in whichever system is native to the project and/or materials before me. So US construction, with virtually all standard dimensions in Imperial (8' ceilings, 32" doors, 16 oc studs, dimensional lumber in inches, etc, etc.) I'm sticking with Imperial.

    • @davidswanson5669
      @davidswanson5669 8 місяців тому +6

      @@ethanwheeler3323I think his original point is valid though - adding, subtracting, and dividing things in half or 3 or more is much simpler in metric. However I use a fractional calculator app (Fraction Calculator Plus) on my phone that allows me to do everything I ever needed to do, nearly as easily as using metric. On a side note, I don’t use feet hardly ever, I just use inches since everything I work on fits inside a garage. What I wish we had was a system where the inch was divided into 10 parts. I want a measuring tape like that. Instead I have an engineering tape where the foot is divided into 10 parts - I don’t like it.

    • @slipsonic809
      @slipsonic809 8 місяців тому +11

      Ive had people comment on my use of the metric system in my HVAC job. They say it's hard to learn. I ask, can you count by 10?
      "yeah"
      Then you know the metric system!
      Pretty much all the new equipment is in metric anyway.

    • @ahnehtub2
      @ahnehtub2 8 місяців тому

      Calculate the number of bolts needed for an one mile bridge if you need to pun the at 1/2 foot distance. :)@@ethanwheeler3323

    • @AdamSnellAdamSnell
      @AdamSnellAdamSnell 8 місяців тому

      To which I would reply: what's 1/6 of a meter? Be precise.
      You have a (dull? 😜) point about converting from the very small to the very large, for times when that matters. But I find I prefer Imperial because a) I've never had the slightest reason to know or care how many inches or feet are in a mile; b) being Human, dividing things by 2, 3, or 4 is far more useful and concrete than dividing by 2 or 5 -- hence my preference for anything base-12 over base-10.

  • @barrycleary3877
    @barrycleary3877 8 місяців тому +44

    Hi Stumpy, coming from Australia I did my schooling and joinery apprenticeship in imperial. Australia went metric, for measurement around 1974 just as I became a tradesman. So I am conversant with both systems. I'm with you, metric is by far a simpler and more accurate way of working. Eventually all us old imperial dudes will be dead along with the system based on 12 with crazy fractions. Long live the metre!

    • @berenzable
      @berenzable 8 місяців тому +1

      12 inches in a foot, yes, but 3 feet in a mile and 5280 feet in a miles. Let’s ignore hands, yards, furlongs, barleycorns, or twips. Yes, for woodworking, you’re mainly in inches and fractions of, but I’m so glad I run my shop entirely metric rather than an archaic British system based on an ancient Roman system

    • @garysouder9111
      @garysouder9111 8 місяців тому +4

      It may be more simple for you but stop saying metric is more accurate - it is not! It is just as accurate as any measurement system you choose to use. Jesse

    • @peterebel7899
      @peterebel7899 8 місяців тому

      As long as you can select to use short tons vs long tons:
      Imperial is alive.

    • @andrewpullen2655
      @andrewpullen2655 8 місяців тому +1

      @@garysouder9111 I agree, both are as accurate as each other. Its just that Imperial may be more prone to error from a "user" perspective.

    • @Rufio1975
      @Rufio1975 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@andrewpullen2655
      You beat me to it. There's more room for error when trying to convert or add and subtract different fractions.

  • @mikefabbi5127
    @mikefabbi5127 Місяць тому

    All construction in Canada is Imperial but when I worked in a cabinet shop all measurements that came in were converted to millimeteres before any cabinets were build. I believe the reason was because the metric system does not need a learning curve. Depending on the skill level of the worker there was less chance of error plus there is no conversion needed within the system.

  • @alii303
    @alii303 29 днів тому

    Im a carpenter in Ireland. our plywood still comes in 8ftx4ft sheets and our plasterboard comes in 1.2mx 2.44m Osb could be eather. because of this sometimes my joist spacing is 16 inch and sometimes its 0.4m

  • @anibal2476
    @anibal2476 8 місяців тому +19

    Here in Puerto Rico: we sell gasoline (petrol) in liters, yet we sell milk and motor oil in quart, half gallon or gallon jugs (yet we ask for a liter of milk); speed is measured in miles per hour, yet distance is measured in kilometers and mileage is calculated in miles per gallon; cloth for sewing is sold by the yard; lumber is sold by inches and feet. In cooking: we use the 'spoon and cup' system. This is a partial list.

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Місяць тому +3

      So, of you go 55 mph on the highway and your destination is 70 km away, you can't easily estimate how long it'll take?
      Sounds very cumbersome!

    • @merlin9702
      @merlin9702 Місяць тому +1

      @@LRM12o8 Converting the speeds is pretty easy though if you don't need exact results.
      50 km/h ≈ 30 mph
      100 km/h ≈ 60 mph
      160 km/h ≈ 100 mph
      200 km/h ≈ 125 mph
      I use these values to make a guess to convert mph to km/h as someone who only uses km/h exclusively and watches American youtube and sometimes needs to know how fast x mph are.
      So I'd guess 55mph are a bit under 100 km/h, let's say 90 km/h and after checking online the exact conversion is 88.51392 km/h, so pretty close.

    • @SamBowker
      @SamBowker Місяць тому

      @@merlin9702 All that mental arithmetic will keep your brain active and ward off Alzheimer's disease. Its probably a cunning government plan. LOL

    • @markthomas919
      @markthomas919 28 днів тому

      Sounds like a real bodge up!

    • @seannorgren5752
      @seannorgren5752 28 днів тому

      I'm so confused...

  • @joefaraone977
    @joefaraone977 8 місяців тому +35

    6 Months ago I bought my first metric measuring tape... I find myself reaching for it more frequently. I'm also old enough to remember being in junior high and being forced to learn the metric system for science... Dividing by ten is not very hard! Cheers!

    • @TheCharleseye
      @TheCharleseye 8 місяців тому +1

      Fractions aren't hard, either. We learned them in elementary school.

    • @wittttttt
      @wittttttt 8 місяців тому +5

      ​@@TheCharleseye Both are easy, but it's just simpler to say one number vs a few numbers. That's it. You can say: "three AND one-sixteenth" or just "seventy-eight". When you're on the jobsite it's easier to scream one number, instead screaming multiple numbers. It's also easier to add/subtract whole numbers. Doesn't mean fractions are difficult

    • @TheCharleseye
      @TheCharleseye 8 місяців тому

      @@wittttttt Obviously fractions aren't difficult. American laborers use fractions without any issues over yelling the numbers across job sites. It's the rest of the world that can't handle something so simple, that they need a system to be even easier than the one Americans learned in grade school. That's fine, though. That was previous generations. This generation can't even make change. It's a good time to switch, so that this generation of Americans actually has half a chance of being able to handle the math related to a given field. American exceptionalism is circling the drain.

    • @joefaraone977
      @joefaraone977 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@TheCharleseye Just to be clear - I use both. Dividing fractions? invert & multiply. Quite simple. Metric - just divide.

    • @shanebumpurs
      @shanebumpurs 8 місяців тому

      yeah I remember them training us on metric when I was a kid, then it just kind of died.

  • @DavyCrosier
    @DavyCrosier 4 місяці тому

    5:15 we also use inches in our building construction A LOT!!

  • @user-gb8jp8ew6z
    @user-gb8jp8ew6z 25 днів тому

    I didn't know i watched some videos from you, untill i noticet the most cleaned up and ordert workplace on youtube.

  • @SeekerOfLight
    @SeekerOfLight 8 місяців тому +31

    I used to hate the metric system. Mainly because their odd sizes didn't fit correctly in the imperial tools I had at the time. But as I aged and started working on industrial machines for overseas, where everything on them is metric, I found it's a far easier method and can quickly be learned by anyone even a child. There are times now even at home where I'll prefer to use the metric system for my work around the house.

  • @manualdidact
    @manualdidact 8 місяців тому +70

    For me, this was really a one-time event. I made the decision when I started to get into CAD modeling back in the mid-00s, to standardize on millimeters for everything, car-size and beyond. Everything else just happened naturally from there -- calipers set to metric, found some decent tape measures and other tools with metric or dual scales, and ultimately I was pretty surprised by how painless it was. Metric fasteners are easy to design with, you can work mostly in whole numbers, a lot less fuss to make the change than I was expecting. Haven't looked back.

    • @ITubetc
      @ITubetc 8 місяців тому +2

      I was going to write almost the same story. I'm happy to say I'm ambidextrous but mostly prefer metric. I still buy 2x4 lumber and 4x8 sheets of plywood not 50x200 or 1219.2mm X 2438.4mm plywood sheets.

    • @arthurmoore9488
      @arthurmoore9488 8 місяців тому +1

      Hardest part for me is finding metric tools at the local big box stores. Plus, pipe fittings are all NPT, and a large amount of equipment uses Imperial fasteners.

    • @h.mandelene3279
      @h.mandelene3279 8 місяців тому +2

      Face it - the REAL reason US car makers went to metric was because all the people making parts(1/2 way around the world) use metric and not Imperial(US makers) and not to make it easier....

    • @markmatthews1802
      @markmatthews1802 8 місяців тому +5

      Same here for designing parts in CAD. So much easier for calculating.

  • @pakjohn48
    @pakjohn48 16 днів тому

    Australian engineer here. I went through school and university using the Imperial system - only in my final year did Australia change over to the S.I. metric system. Boy, I wished that we had changed much earlier - S.I. made many calculations much easier.

  • @user-qx2fd8ej2e
    @user-qx2fd8ej2e 7 днів тому

    At least one of the "big three" American automakers has been using all metric fasteners on their vehicles since the early 90s. The other two have slowly come around.
    But also my doctor's offices have been recording measurements in metric for years now.
    I've been using 24-hour clock, dd-mm-yy date format, and metric length, mass, volume, and temperature units since my early teens at least. I'm about to be 35 now.

  • @colinstu
    @colinstu 8 місяців тому +63

    metric screws make so much more sense to me. Also I find measuring everything in mm (for projects) way easier.. get better than 1/16th" accuracy with a single number - no fractions or decimals needed.

    • @Gamerad360
      @Gamerad360 8 місяців тому +7

      It just makes more sense in general.

    • @stevenbutler4080
      @stevenbutler4080 8 місяців тому +8

      You can get setup blocks and rules that provide 1/32nd of accuracy which is more accurate than a mm. But when you need to divide that 1 meter base cabinet into 3 equal width top drawers for a buffet let me know how the division goes :).

    • @CzKaa
      @CzKaa 8 місяців тому +11

      @@stevenbutler4080 If you need better accuracy, simply use 0.1 or 0.01 or 0.001mm. It is common for working on a metal lathe, for example. :)
      And try splitting 10" into 3 equal parts - it's the same problem.

    • @barryhamm3414
      @barryhamm3414 8 місяців тому +4

      A 1 meter cabinet is 39.3700787 inches, let me know how that division into 3 equal parts goes.

    • @zyamadeadborn1785
      @zyamadeadborn1785 8 місяців тому +5

      No one uses exactly 100 cm wide cabinets, the standard is 45/60/120. There you go.