Green twin, here in Australia we went metric 1966 I think? Memory fails in stuff it seems to deem unimportant but weirdly whilst I use metric my grey matter will look at 75mm and tell me "About 3 inches". Similarly with 150mm 6" 300 foot. This I think just gives me a mental image of stuff.
I have asked people in the metric world how they can envision things without the unit "feet", ie: that telephone pole is 40 feet tall, or that tank is 30 feet in diameter.
The response is that they can indeed envision the approximate size of things using mm, or I guess meters, etc.
Such would have to be the case, else it would be very difficult to build large physical structures.
I wish I could look at something like a 4x8 sheet of plywood and immediately think in terms of mm or some other metric unit, but I can't, and I don't know anyone else in the building industry who can (I know a lot of folks in the construction industry here).
I am not sure how we get acceptance of the metric system here without overcoming the groupthink here of inches/feet/yards.
There is a lot of dual labeling these days, and I notice it a lot on wood products, but generally they break down something with nice round imperial units such as a 4x8 sheet of plywood to a very cumbersome 1219.2 mm x 2438.4 mm.
This is the issue that must be overcome.
Every structure in this country (homes, factories, truck trailers, etc.) are built in nice round units of inches/feet/yards.
For equipment assemblies, automobiles, etc. the metric seems to go better.
For large construction, the metric does on work so well.
I am not against metric by any stretch, but there are some very rational/practical reasons why it has not been widely accepted here in many applications.
Edit:
On project sites, I often step off distances, with each step being approximately 12".
Very useful for getting approximate distances quickly.
Does this happen with metric?
Edit2:
I think the unit of feet can from the human foot ? and the yard came from the length of the human arm ?
So easy to envision.
Not sure where inches came from.
Metric would be much easier if it had the unit "foot-o-meter".
Is it too late to add that unit to the metric system?
If that unit gets added, remember you heard it here first.
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