As I have many old drills that are factional inches, and many threads use number drills, as well as fractional inches for the pilot holes, I find I use "whatever the table says" is needed for the drill sizes. Metric, fractional inch, Number, etc. I.E. I use all the "tool sizes" required without worrying about Imperial or metric units.
Similarly, I have metric dials on the milling machine, and imperial on the lathe, so simply convert whatever needs converting on the drawing to "machine sizes".
I think in whatever dimensions "suit the job".
I grew-up as a teenager in an "imperial" school, that was converting to Metric, so we had new text books in the "new units". - Same sums, just expensive conversions!
Yet I then experienced piston sizes for various car and truck engines, at a machine shop where I worked part-time, and found that most pistons were in fractional inch sizes - but not simple sizes - just converted from round-numbered mm sizes!
e.g.
Millimeters to inches conversion table
Millimeters (mm) | Inches (") (decimal) | Inches (") (fraction) |
---|
60 mm | 2.3622 ″ | 2 23/64 ″ |
70 mm | 2.7559 ″ | 2 3/4 ″ |
80 mm | 3.1496 ″ | 3 5/32 ″ |
90 mm | 3.5433 ″ | 3 35/64 ″ |
But re-boring and honing the cylinders was in Imperial over-sizes, so the decimal inch was quoted in the books next to the "standard" (fractional inch, or sometime cm!) bore size, with the part size in decimal inches.
Hence I am ambidextrous-ish in these units. I never realised it was such a problem until this thread.
"Fortunately" we all live with our own histories, and manage whatever way we can. I think the only real "standard method" to propose is "work to the drawing sizes,
converted to our own machine/tool sizes as appropriate". After all, we make parts using the available tools and scales on the machines, so need clear instructions when doing that.
Hi SHop SHoe,
I hope this suggestion doesn't contradict your message (I got confused a bit by your ramblings... But I am sure my ramblings are more difficult to follow! PLEASE correct me when I ramble too much, or am unclear.).
ENJOY,
K2