Built like a Mercedes (?)

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Comments4u, Jan 29, 2006.

  1. If I may say so, that's just a silly non-sequitur. The fact remains that
    you have been given the exact ratio of the UK and US gallons, which you
    somehow seek to deny.

    DAS

    For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling
     
    Dori A Schmetterling, Feb 15, 2006
  2. Comments4u

    Whoever Guest

    Amazing how people can be so certain that they are right in the face of
    EVIDENCE that they are, in fact, WRONG!

    Try this web page:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_the_Imperial_and_U.S._customary_systems

    Here is a quote from it:
    1 U.S. fluid ounce = 29.5735295625 mililitres ~= 1.041 Imperial
    fluid ounces

    See that? A US FL Oz. is NOT the same as an Imperial Fl. Oz. In fact, as I
    mentioned earlier, a US Fl Oz is slightly larger than an Imperial Fl. Oz.

    As for "living in Canada": so what? Some of us have actually lived in
    different countries! In my kitchen, I have both Imperial pint measure jugs
    and US pint measure jugs -- I think that trumps your "I've lived next door
    to the US".
     
    Whoever, Feb 15, 2006
  3. Comments4u

    Whoever Guest

    In my industry, US-based companies switched about 20 years ago from using
    inches to using SI units.

    Regarding rulers, though: ever tried to buy a metric ruler (or any metric
    measure) in a hardware store? They seem to be either unavailable or very
    rare.
     
    Whoever, Feb 15, 2006
  4. I think the purely metric ones are fairly rare, but I've got a Lufkin
    metric/inch combination tape measure that came from Lowe's. I use it a
    *lot* more than I expected.
     
    St. John Smythe, Feb 15, 2006
  5. OK, so there is a 4% difference. For all practical purposes they are
    the same. For all practical purposes there are 5 US quarts in an
    imperial gallon.

    For all practical purposes, a fifth of liquor is 26 imperal ounces, or
    a "twenty sixer" Closer than 750ml, which is the metric"equivalent"
    and since the seventies or eighties has replaced the"fifth" in the US.

    I'm not discussing this any further - you want to nit-pick - nit-pick.
     
    clare at snyder.on.ca, Feb 16, 2006
  6. Comments4u

    Whoever Guest

    My original statement was that the ratio was closer to 5/6 than 4/5. You
    wrote that I was wrong about this. Well, guess what: YOU WERE WRONG!

    Check out what others posted: you will find that the 5/6 ratio is fairly
    close.
    Translation: You just won't admit that you were wrong. If you did not want
    to discuss it, why even post your last response?
     
    Whoever, Feb 16, 2006
  7. Comments4u

    DTJ Guest

    You amaze me with how much you think you know.

    We have not always hated the french, just lately when they decided it
    was more important to steal money from the Iraqi people and allow SH
    to murder women and children, and to attempt to prevent the US from
    putting a stop to it.

    Remember how to tell if someone is french? Are they waving a white
    flag?

    *************************
    Dave
     
    DTJ, Feb 16, 2006
  8. Comments4u

    DTJ Guest

    Sure sounds like you are.

    *************************
    Dave
     
    DTJ, Feb 16, 2006
  9. Comments4u

    Bill Putney Guest

    I'll drink to that.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Feb 16, 2006
  10. I am an american and I love the french. We would not have a country
    without them.

    Also could all of you people STOP this crossposting madness? I know
    you do drift back on topic at times, but still this is absurd.

    Perhaps you could all (all 5 of you) start a new newsgroup
    alt.dumb.crossposters.

    Marty
    PS yes I know I am guilty also.
     
    Martin Joseph, Feb 16, 2006
  11. Comments4u

    Huw Guest


    There are now 974 messages in this conversation from 49 authors. Why stop
    now? Besides which I don't even know what the topic is. I know what it says
    in the subject line but that is irrelevant.
    Does anyone actually know what the topic is? I think it may be about trains
    and cars.

    Huw
     
    Huw, Feb 16, 2006
  12. Things are *not* very different up here in Canada, and it would be
    disingenuous to suggest they are. Sure, the highways are signed in km/h
    and the motor fuel is sold in litres. That's the primary main
    difference! You can still walk into any supermarket's deli counter and
    ask for a quarter-pound of smoked meat, a half-pound of marble cheddar
    sliced about 1/8-inch thick, and two pounds of fresh mozzarella,
    without any problem. The label printed on what you get might call out
    115g of smoked meat, 225g of marble cheddar sliced 3mm thick, and 900g
    of fresh mozzarella, but you never have to ask in metric. Likewise,
    people still talk about IKEA being about 3 miles away, and just you
    *try* getting anything metric at Rona or Home Despot. Nope,
    everything's inch, from the fluorescent tubes to the lumber, plumbing
    supplies, electrical terminals and fasteners. You can get USS and SAE
    thread machine screws in a whole huge range of sizes, but only one or
    two metric sizes. I had to drive clear across town to Brafasco to get
    some 4mm screws just this week after calling half a dozen large and
    small Toronto-area hardware and home warehouse stores without success.
     
    Daniel J. Stern, Feb 16, 2006
  13. Things are *not* very different up here in Canada, and it would be
    disingenuous to suggest they are. Sure, the highways are signed in km/h
    and the motor fuel is sold in litres. That's the primary main
    difference! You can still walk into any supermarket's deli counter and
    ask for a quarter-pound of smoked meat, a half-pound of marble cheddar
    sliced about 1/8-inch thick, and two pounds of fresh mozzarella,
    without any problem. The label printed on what you get might call out
    115g of smoked meat, 225g of marble cheddar sliced 3mm thick, and 900g
    of fresh mozzarella, but you never have to ask in metric. Likewise,
    people still talk about IKEA being about 3 miles away, and just you
    *try* getting anything metric at Rona or Home Despot. Nope,
    everything's inch, from the fluorescent tubes to the lumber, plumbing
    supplies, electrical terminals and fasteners. You can get USS and SAE
    thread machine screws in a whole huge range of sizes, but only one or
    two metric sizes. I had to drive clear across town to Brafasco to get
    some 4mm screws just this week after calling half a dozen large and
    small Toronto-area hardware and home warehouse stores without success.
     
    Daniel J. Stern, Feb 16, 2006
  14. Yes Daniel but...

    Well, keep in mind that Toronto is a bit more cosmopolitan than say,
    where I live. You ask the kids in the groery store for a pound
    of sliced ham and you get a bit of a blank stare till them
    remember that that's 454 grams.

    I think the know this becuase marijuana is sold by the gram.

    Temperature is a better example of this. I remember the day
    (sep 6/77, I *think*) Canada switched to metric... I was dirving
    to aforementioned uni.

    I know what 72F means or 80F. You tell me it's gonna be 21 tomorrow
    and I *think* that's warm. I think. Maybe. I dunno.

    The point is kids that have grown up withit and know nothing else
    have taken to metric 100%. Some of us old farts. Now OTOH my
    parents know about all this celcius stuff so go figure.

    I like grams for grocerty stuff, it's more precise, but celcius
    is more course than farenheit and not as usefull, to me anyway.

    I don't know anybody that used kilometers for distance. That's
    aoways miles, and miage is always "miles per gallon" here from
    what I see, not l/100km or whatever.
     
    Richard Sexton, Feb 17, 2006
  15. Good point, I missed that. You'd probably have a better chance finding
    Whitworth thread bolt here than metric in the small villiage in Canada
    that I live in.

    "And my dad has all the wrenches"
     
    Richard Sexton, Feb 17, 2006
  16. crap. I do not know anyone that uses F ... everyone, and I mean everyone
    uses C. What the hell, why do the US use an old antiquated german system
    of temperature... Farenheit.... give me a break. 0 was as cold as he could
    get it and at the upper end he put 100 F when he in fact had a fever. SI,
    the greatest thing Napoleon ever did.

    Crap again. if you are an old foggy I'm sure the store is not going to
    turn you away when you order in pounds .... hell, they still use pounds in
    germany.... Most reasonably well educated - even those that are not - typically
    use g/kg when ordering .... about the only place I still see lbs used mostly
    if not exclusively is when giving your weight and well, who'd want to use
    newtons anyway.

    The label printed on what you get might call out
    not in my world.... I drive 100kph and the speed limits are 100 kph and
    I know something 100 km away will take 1 hr. ..... so simple. I do not know
    of anyone in miles/hr or even when talking cars who is NOT using liters/100km
    it's just so much easier. I guess you are older.....

    go figure..... that's because home depost is american. Rona is a different
    story, no problem with metric. However, considering Canada's economy is geared
    to the US's not much of a suprise to see imperial used

    ,
    listen, metric and imperial are equally present. Personally I've got a fair
    set of tools and only my ratchet has 3/8" on it.... everything else is metric.
    I guess it is a fair statement that IF you want to close your eyes to metric
    you can still do it.... but not much longer. Kids have no idea of imperial
    anymore..... except, as I said, weight.

    cheers
     
    Guenter Scholz, Feb 17, 2006
  17. Comments4u

    John Q Guest

    Well hell you also order meat at your friendly charcuterie in FRANCE of all
    places in pounds (livres). Germany has its zentners (100 pounds, not kg).
    A lot of (most?) tires and even bicycles in Europe are measured in inches.
    (I have a bitch with tire sizings everywhere, why do they need to combine
    inches and millimeters with tire sizes? Pick one system and stick with
    it).
     
    John Q, Feb 17, 2006
  18. Comments4u

    John Q Guest

    I don't mind Fahrenheit at all. With whole numbers, you get more precision with
    Fahrenheit than you do with Celsius. Not sure how a numberi can be antiquated.
    Heh, in UK it's common to give you weight in stones.
    I never did figure out why litres per 100 km. When you are stopped, you
    instantaneous economy is infinity. How do you average that? Similarily as your
    economy improves it is a limit to zero. 100 km per litre or just km per litre sure
    would make a lot more sense mathmatically.
    Imperial? US doesn't use imperial gallons, generally.
    You could say the same thing about tools in USA. If you're going to do much you
    need both systems. Here I wish everything was SI, but tool companies like the
    current situation I suppose.
     
    John Q, Feb 17, 2006
  19. Comments4u

    John Q Guest

    In the US, it's ounces. At least that's how the laws are usually written.
    Cocaine on the other hand tends to use SI measurements.

    On thing I've noticed is in France they tend to weigh food ingredients more
    than in America (North at least). For example, US cooks might sift flour
    and then try to measure it by volume, which is moderately precise at best.
    French cooks will simply weigh the flour and be done with it. Much more
    precise and takes a lot less time. Probably part of the reason why the food
    is so good.
     
    John Q, Feb 17, 2006
  20. Comments4u

    Bill Putney Guest

    We don't eat snails. :)

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Feb 17, 2006
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