American reacts to 'Is The Metric System Actually Better?'

2023 ж. 27 Нау.
415 330 Рет қаралды

Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to Is The Metric System Actually Better?
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  • A litre of water, 1000 ml, wil fill a 10x10x10 cm cube and weigh 1 kilo. It will freeze at 0 degrees and boil at 100 degrees. The energy needed to heat that litre of water 1 degree is 1 kilocalorie. It's an elegant system. Of course it's superior but the problem is with the switch.

    @DenUitvreter@DenUitvreter Жыл бұрын
    • There’s beauty in its simplicity and consistency. And yes: frozen up to 0°, then fluid up to 100°, then gas. Perfect 😘

      @margreetanceaux3906@margreetanceaux3906 Жыл бұрын
    • Also a cm is 1/100 of a metre and a metre was defined as a distance of 1/10,000,000 from the equator to the North Pole, which says the distance from equator to the North Pole is 10 million metres, defined by the French in 1793.

      @michaellaw3943@michaellaw3943 Жыл бұрын
    • Calorie is not metric. Joules are.

      @udavster@udavster Жыл бұрын
    • @@udavster I don't know. I know the system switched to joule, but I don't know whether that excludes calorie from metric because I don't know the exact definition of metric.

      @DenUitvreter@DenUitvreter Жыл бұрын
    • it will boil at sea level at 100 degree. Up high in Himalaya its more like 97-98 degree

      @genrabbit9995@genrabbit9995 Жыл бұрын
  • Metric system seems pretty common in US schools,... I mean 9mm are very, very popular, I believe.

    @DarthHLT@DarthHLT11 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @dancingtrex6614@dancingtrex661410 ай бұрын
    • dude lol

      @jonatassilveira3969@jonatassilveira39699 ай бұрын
    • Now this is what I call: Shots fired.

      @OurFamily-@OurFamily-9 ай бұрын
    • You killed it bruh

      @Orion225@Orion2258 ай бұрын
    • Lol

      @Steelmage99@Steelmage998 ай бұрын
  • For a country that rebelled against a monarch it is weird they want to keep measuring stuff in that monarch's feet.

    @itsmebatman@itsmebatman Жыл бұрын
    • Too dumb, lazy or stubborn to adjust. The American way.

      @nizzanator@nizzanator11 ай бұрын
    • Ikr, they should have embraced it with open arms.

      @TheDennys21@TheDennys218 ай бұрын
    • I was just about to text same thing. Hate Britain soo much but keep their measure. But made their own gallon measure( 3.9 litres compared to 4.5 litres. Even as a kid in 70s I thought it weird

      @user-gr8zn1yp5l@user-gr8zn1yp5l5 ай бұрын
    • They didnt rebel against a monarch. You dont understand, because youre ignorant of the facts. the British colonists that rebelled didnt rebel because they hated a monarch.

      @adamdriver1016@adamdriver10164 ай бұрын
    • @@user-gr8zn1yp5l they didn't hate Britain. The vast majority were British. George Washington fought for the British military. They didnt make their own gallon, they simply chose which British gallon to use. They varied depending upon what you measured. Why as a kid in the 70s didn't you find the answer out for yourself?

      @adamdriver1016@adamdriver10164 ай бұрын
  • My wife left me because, she said, I was too European. I saw it coming from 1,6 kilometers away.

    @bartermens8219@bartermens82194 ай бұрын
  • Australia converted to metric in 1972. It's a much simpler system than imperial - everything is in 10s, 100s and 1000s.

    @FionaEm@FionaEm Жыл бұрын
    • It was ‘74-‘76. For a while after that the government banned duel measuring tapes which was probably a good thing. We also stuck metric lables over our car’s speed o meters. 😎🦘

      @Lee.Freeman@Lee.Freeman Жыл бұрын
    • Dicks are still measured in inches. Weed is still bought in ounces. Americans usually buy cocaine in kilos.... or grams perhaps unless you can afford an 8- ball.

      @bloozee@bloozee Жыл бұрын
    • So you and 2 other people are being paid 10 dollars between you what will you do with the pennies left over? Do the same thing in imperial system and everyone gets their money.

      @angelavara4097@angelavara4097 Жыл бұрын
    • Bit weird how the US didn't go metric after the French helped win the war!

      @bloozee@bloozee Жыл бұрын
    • @@bloozee metric system was instaured in France later than the US independance.

      @vaudou74@vaudou74 Жыл бұрын
  • We in South Africa went metric in 1970. It was more exciting to have the speed limit at 120 than 70😂

    @lorenv44@lorenv44 Жыл бұрын
    • made my day, thank you!

      @christiansonnenberg6306@christiansonnenberg6306 Жыл бұрын
    • Huh, km/h is not metric! The metric velocity unit is m/s. 😂

      @dmitrykazakov2829@dmitrykazakov2829 Жыл бұрын
    • @@dmitrykazakov2829 nah, that's base SI units 😂

      @taladin1015@taladin1015 Жыл бұрын
    • @@dmitrykazakov2829 . Km/h is metric, just not in base SI units.

      @rebecca4680@rebecca4680 Жыл бұрын
    • @@rebecca4680 Non-base SI units of duration are such as ms, ns, i.e. second multiplied by some power of ten. Hour is not a SI unit.

      @dmitrykazakov2829@dmitrykazakov2829 Жыл бұрын
  • “In metric, one milliliter of water occupies one cubic centimeter, weighs one gram, and requires one calorie1 of energy to heat up by one degree centigrade-which is 1 percent of the difference between its freezing point and its boiling point. An amount of hydrogen weighing the same amount has exactly one mole of atoms in it. Whereas in the American system, the answer to ‘How much energy does it take to boil a room-temperature gallon of water?’ is ‘Go fuck yourself,’ because you can’t directly relate any of those quantities.” Wild Thing by Josh Bazell.

    @sorbetcitron6783@sorbetcitron67839 ай бұрын
  • As a Canadian growing up under the metric system. But learning carpentry, from people that use imperial, i use a mixture of both. Like for example, i am 193cm tall, or 1.93m, or in imperial I am 6'4" for an easy conversion 1" is 2.54cm, 1kg is 2.2lb (rounded) things like that. Ive recently switched back over to 100% metric. It's just easier for me.

    @ryanwilson_canada@ryanwilson_canada Жыл бұрын
    • I was a union carpenter foreman at that time - it brings back memories with the first set of metric prints I ever built from. I had a gang of about 20 men and after the first couple of days I had enough with the costly mistakes, wasted time, and wasted lumber. That night I bought 20 metric only tapes and as the men came in the next morning asked for their old tapes as I was "gifting" them with a brand new one. Tool box meeting - laid down the law, end of mistakes. There was a lot of bitching but they were all Steady-Eddys' and didn't want to quit or get laid off. They eventually got used to it and eventually like it.

      @niemi5858@niemi5858 Жыл бұрын
    • Canada is everything but metric in the trades. Good luck finding any metric nuts and bolts in hardware stores. It's such a pita.

      @Derzull2468@Derzull246811 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, unless you're in Quebec or an immigrant to Canada, you'll have generally used feet/inches and pounds when referring to your own bodily measurements , so we're not quite as 'metric' as some people seem to think we are. While the majority of the other use cases tend to be metric, we're still actually a mixed system in a number of ways. P.S. Forgot about Canadian (gridiron) football, which is a sport very closely related to the American version (both deriving from rugby), and both use yards for distance (though a Canadian field is 150 yards long [110 yards plus 2 end zones of 20 yards each] x 65 yards wide, thus midfield is the 55 yard line).

      @CanuckGod@CanuckGod11 ай бұрын
    • @@CanuckGod I am absolutely in favour metric (UK, and been in favour since 1972). But I am happy to refer to my weight in stones and lbs, simply because I know from experience what they equate to in general terms. The same with mph, because in general terms, I am familiar with my speed when I see it happening. But if I want to calculate the precise length of something from the angle it makes with a vertical surface, using Imperial is absolutely insane. With metric, it is easy. This is the issue. The people who are comfortable with Imperial usually don't need to have to do any maths with it. They just know approximations (or rote additions if buying groceries). Like a pound of carrots or potatoes at the grocery store. In that sense, units don't matter too much. But when you're dealing cross border with the world, or trying to do very accurate calculations, they matter a lot. Especially when US Imperial is different to UK Imperial in some cases.

      @sualdammacsamildanach8154@sualdammacsamildanach815411 ай бұрын
    • @@CanuckGod We also tend to measure distance in time rather than kilometers. A modern phenomena.

      @2l84t@2l84tАй бұрын
  • As an ex engineer I can use both but Metric is just soooooooo much easier. It just makes sense.

    @richardgoddard37@richardgoddard37 Жыл бұрын
    • The shifty powers of 2 rock! Gallon

      @GB-ez6ge@GB-ez6ge Жыл бұрын
    • Well, humans have 10 fingers, and we do math based on 10s, so yes, it's only easy because it's natural (and better).

      @elmodelo101@elmodelo10111 ай бұрын
    • Sir you are not an Ex Engineer, you are an engineer as far as you live!! is a way of thinking !!

      @dimitrioslianos511@dimitrioslianos51111 ай бұрын
    • @dimitrios lianos I did my apprenticeship in sheet metal work. You can now do 95% of that trade with the push of a button. Got out of industry years ago when the credit crunch let to 2 redundancies in 6 months. Don't miss it.

      @richardgoddard37@richardgoddard3711 ай бұрын
    • you are not an engeeener.. you pretend to be, by used ANY non SI mesurements...

      @tjguzik@tjguzik10 ай бұрын
  • A couple of days ago, I saw a video where a number of acres was mentioned. I had no idea, how much of area this was, so I looked it up: 1 acre = 1 chain X 1 furlong. I kept looking: 1 chain = 22 yards, 1 furlong = 10 chains = 220 yards = 660 feet. So 1 acre = 4,848 square yards = 43,560 square feet which is roughly 4,047m² and 640 acres = 1 square mile. The corresponding for agricultural space in metric would be the hectare. 1ha = 100m X 100m = 10,000m². 100ha = 1km² Ask me again, which system is better.

    @mina_en_suiza@mina_en_suiza Жыл бұрын
    • 1 acre = 4840 sq. yards (22 x 220), not 4848 sq. yards ... and I understand the frustration, many times we make errors in converting between different imperial units.

      @nathanoyeght@nathanoyeght Жыл бұрын
    • @@nathanoyeght The "8" was a typo. Thank you for noticing! So, at least 1 person read what I wrote.

      @mina_en_suiza@mina_en_suiza Жыл бұрын
    • I just tried to calculate the force of pressure of 3 gallons of water in a 3 square foot barrel. In PSI (pounds per inch)

      @ThePalsanich@ThePalsanich Жыл бұрын
    • @@mina_en_suiza Also, if you notice ... hectare is a compound word - hect(o) + are. 1 hectare = 100 ares. 1 are = 100 sq. meter. Hectare is so commonly used, than people overlook that 'are' is the root word, and follows metric nomenclature.

      @nathanoyeght@nathanoyeght Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@nathanoyeght I knew, but didn't mention it because nobody really uses the are (except in crossword puzzles: "measurement unit for areas with two letters". In German it's "Ar", also "Hektar" ).

      @mina_en_suiza@mina_en_suiza Жыл бұрын
  • As a French, I’m proud one of our contribution to the world was the metric system. One of the few good things to come out of the Revolution

    @pn4960@pn49605 ай бұрын
    • The french contribution to the metric system could have been huge, but they couldn't decide for words for the numbers 70-99

      @drolp97z@drolp97z4 ай бұрын
    • You guys have a decent histroy of how to deal with the rich/powerful too, don't forget that.

      @BeansOnToast420@BeansOnToast4204 ай бұрын
    • I'm French too and I know one of the reasons why metrics appeared... There were hundreds of measurement systems in the little French kingdom before our revolution - we could not manage with such a mess :D

      @deck614@deck6144 ай бұрын
    • Now can you please stop assigning gender to everyday objects?

      @MegaGandalf12@MegaGandalf12Ай бұрын
    • @@MegaGandalf12This is the French language. Also in German (not the same :D ), Russian, Italian, etc. etc. You have a mess of a quest, kid, so sad for you.

      @deck614@deck614Ай бұрын
  • That man banging his head against the wall is me, as a Continental European, when I understood that my British colleagues could not divide by 10.

    @samhartford8677@samhartford8677 Жыл бұрын
    • Weird they should definitely be able to since the only thing they way still use the imperial system widescale is for measuring distance and speed on roads. And schools definitely just use metric whenever it comes to physics or maths.

      @thatguy6482@thatguy648229 күн бұрын
    • metric is taught in the UK in every school - we use imperial for some everyday things like milk, beer, and (perhaps the most annoyingly) roads but we generally get the best of both because a pint of beer is the correct amount of beer - i don't think your colleagues not being able to divide by 10 is so much to do with the fact that they're British (you never know though), anyone who can't divide by 10 probably has a learning disability so you should go easy on them lol

      @landmimes@landmimes26 күн бұрын
  • I grew up in a country that converted to metrics when I was in primary school. To this day, I am SO glad I did not have to do high school physics and maths using the Imperial system.

    @wsmccallum5069@wsmccallum5069 Жыл бұрын
    • To be fair, in America, we use metric for physics anyway (mostly).

      @WeretigerX@WeretigerX Жыл бұрын
    • Here in Mexico we deal with a lot of American machinery and related stuff, so we do have to use inches and feet if we're studying engineering. I've learned to understand their use as a tool to force you to understand the relation between natural units (m) and constructed ones (N) because the imperial system is not made for science, so there's not a lot of the latter and you have to deal with the raw lbf*s/(hotdog*eagle)

      @echinas0908@echinas0908 Жыл бұрын
    • I already wanted to throw hands whenever I had to calorie-Joule and Celsius-Kelvin conversions I would've DIED

      @justarandomgothamite5466@justarandomgothamite546611 ай бұрын
    • I'm studying physics and if I had to use imperial units, I would just straight up not study physics, I'd be studying math and idk ethics or something like that

      @lucykitsune4619@lucykitsune461911 ай бұрын
    • ​@@justarandomgothamite5466as a metric user i must say - calorie isn't bad one. Others but calorie

      @user-ct5zg2gu8j@user-ct5zg2gu8j4 ай бұрын
  • there are two kinds of countries... Those that use the metric system and those who lost a war to Vietnamese farmers

    @freudsigmund72@freudsigmund72 Жыл бұрын
    • Didn't the frensch also lost against these Vietnam farmers 🙂

      @DSP16569@DSP16569 Жыл бұрын
    • @@DSP16569 yea but france sucks

      @wezerd@wezerd Жыл бұрын
    • @@DSP16569 Yep, they caught a dose of "Dien Bien Flu". . . . . . . . . . . . . .

      @572Btriode@572Btriode Жыл бұрын
    • @@DSP16569 By an American betrayal in Dien Dien Phu. Frenchs was promised a nassive air shelling if the gathered the Viets....(What they ve done).

      @pierrefraisse8610@pierrefraisse8610 Жыл бұрын
    • @@DSP16569 "didn't" and "lost", you must be French and English is your second language. Right?

      @ricardoaraoz717@ricardoaraoz717 Жыл бұрын
  • I recently switched to the 24 hour clock so now I'm fully metric. I have never been outside the US but I have friends in Canada. Metric may not be helpful when I talk to people in person but I do a lot of tech stuff so it's helpful for what I do. Game dev software measures distance in metres & so does Subnautica. It would be a pain in the ass doing tech stuff with imperial units.

    @shadowxthevampiressofficial@shadowxthevampiressofficial3 ай бұрын
  • I didn't realise Americans understood sarcasm. You have exceeded my expectations.

    @GrahamMayer@GrahamMayer3 ай бұрын
    • I guess you do not watch much American TV

      @Facetterdk@Facetterdk23 күн бұрын
  • As a European I always wondered how you measure something precisely in the imperial system....I mean, in metric you have millimeters, but an inch is 2.54 cm. So a millimeter is like what....0.03 inches??? How do you use a measuring tape with the imperial system on it when you want to measure millimeters? And what about rulers at school in geometry? It must be crazy....

    @veronikam3836@veronikam3836 Жыл бұрын
    • Imperial rulers usually go down to a 16th of an inch, so pretty close to a millimeter. IN the end both systems are arbitrary because they were both made up by someone who said "yep, this is how I'll measure a meter" or kilogram or whatever. Then science has had to go back and find some constant that aligns with that measurement. The "genius" of the metric system is everything works in tens and most people can do that maths, so long as everything COMES in tens. The issue is when you have 36 spans of 15.36 meters and you need to do the maths. Now everything isn't in tens, so you use a calculator. Funny enough we can program calculators to count in anything we want, tens are just easier...

      @adamruscoe170@adamruscoe170 Жыл бұрын
    • I hope you’re not building rockets with that inches to centimetres conversion factor. You might want to edit it 😊 Cheers.

      @Bellas1717@Bellas1717 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Bellas1717 Lol, no I'm not. I didn't remember correctly the conversion of inch to cm. So correction - one inch is 2.54 cm. IF I ever were to build a rocket, I would do so in the metric system only. ;-)

      @veronikam3836@veronikam3836 Жыл бұрын
    • Well how do Americans measure small things like the grooves on a screw? The use thou, which are thousandths of an inch.

      @neuralwarp@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
    • In the UK in the 60s, I was using a centre grinder to grind to a tolerance of plus or minus half a thousandth of an inch.

      @grahvis@grahvis Жыл бұрын
  • I attended a teacher’s college in 1975 in Australia. The country had just converted to the metric system . Our currency changed back in 1966. We were being taught the metric system at the same time as learning how to teach it to school children, because we hadn’t learned it ourselves in school

    @c8Lorraine1@c8Lorraine1 Жыл бұрын
  • To switch to metric, America will probably have to do what Canada has been doing. We started off with imperial. When my dad was going to school, schools were teaching both metric and imperial, and now he’s the only member of my family who knows the conversion between °C and °F off the top of his head. When I was going to school, I was only taught metric. Yet as many Canadians do, I still use the systems relatively interchangeably. I almost exclusively measure my own body in imperial, using feet, pounds, and inches. However, I think of distance, elevation, temperature, and speed in metric, along with any more sophisticated measurements, and seeing imperial units in a university physics class actually makes me uncomfortable. I have been making an effort to slowly transfer my brain over to using metric entirely. Using entirely metric makes conversions between different metric units easy. Want to convert km/h to m/s? The use for learning algebra in high school finally makes sense! Cancel out hours with the equivalent value in seconds, and cancel out kilometres with the equivalent value in metres. 10km/h x (1000m)/(1km) = 10000m/h 10000m/h x (1h)/(3600s) = 2.778m/s Or in short terms, 1m/s = 3.6km/h This is admittedly one conversion I think I will always need a calculator for, but at least it’s relatively easy to memorize what number you need to multiply or divide one value by to get the other. The weirdest thing I’ve seen so far in physics is that some constants such as the ideal gas constant or universal gas constant have values expressed in two different sets of units. I don’t even remember the units themselves off the top of my head, but it can either have a value of 8.314 or 0.08206, and you have to be careful about which one you use depending on what you’re trying to calculate. Most values related to gases in physics are calculated using the 8.314 value. However, some calculations involving gases in chemistry are done using the 0.08206 value.

    @Ben_Kimber@Ben_Kimber11 ай бұрын
  • The same situation is with traffic signs. The USA has mostly signs with words whereas most of the world uses standardized signs also with specific shapes.

    @maxbarko8717@maxbarko8717 Жыл бұрын
    • YES imagine China used traffic signs the American way and there was a single American visiting China, it would be a desaster, but in the US it’s fine because.

      @siliconvalley577@siliconvalley577 Жыл бұрын
    • So true!

      @maxbarko8717@maxbarko8717 Жыл бұрын
    • An interesting fact : European signs are this way because they were designed to be understandable by illiterate people (it was the 1930's after all) Even today most signs are just pictograms. So you only need to learn a few words in the language of the country to understand the eventual written addition. And even then most additions are very simple, giving weights or distances.

      @LeSarthois@LeSarthois Жыл бұрын
    • In the 1970s Germany changed from a „Halt“ to the „Stop“ sign.

      @maxbarko8717@maxbarko8717 Жыл бұрын
    • @@maxbarko8717 Those changes were mostly to make it easier to drive around Europe. It's also the reason why we have this one yellow/white sign, a compromise with out neighbors.

      @swanpride@swanpride Жыл бұрын
  • Oh, this ended up becoming really complicated really fast! Almost like the first time I tried to bake a cake the American way... 🥴😂

    @Kari.F.@Kari.F. Жыл бұрын
    • I totally messed up my Mongolian beef tonight because everything was in pounds and ounces and I just tried to wing it rather than googling the conversion. It was a disaster and the kids ended up having ham and cheese toasted 😂

      @Dr_KAP@Dr_KAP Жыл бұрын
    • "A cup? What kind of cup!?" 😅

      @sandyakabatteriehuhn@sandyakabatteriehuhn Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@sandyakabatteriehuhn D cup??

      @b.v.nielsen8714@b.v.nielsen8714 Жыл бұрын
    • @@b.v.nielsen8714 it‘s you, Brigitte?

      @germanmechanic8591@germanmechanic8591 Жыл бұрын
    • That's how the portions come out far too big.

      @DenUitvreter@DenUitvreter Жыл бұрын
  • What is quite funny is that many English words for measurements are actually... French. For instance, the British system is called: _avoirdupois_ , which literally means _good of weight_ (des avoirs de poids, en français moderne). A _pint_ is French, even though in modern French (pinte) it now means 1/2 litter. The same for _ounce_ , which is also French (once), _barrel_ which evolved from the French word _baril_ . We can add _gallon_ to the list as well and _cup_ of course. So when Americans complain that the metric system is _French_ , well their system is actually based on old French as well... Ironic no? YOU CANNOT ESCAPE US...

    @lesfreresdelaquote1176@lesfreresdelaquote1176 Жыл бұрын
    • even worse, they use the outdated French system, the Americans can be said to be more "French" than the French. Tabernac!

      @LudwigVaanArthans@LudwigVaanArthans Жыл бұрын
    • 40% of english words come from the french, and another 20% also have french roots but more ancient and obscure.

      @math9172@math917210 ай бұрын
    • @@math9172 Yes of course, you are right. The Norman invasion was no small picnic and the damage to the English language is still very visible even today. French people usually think of English as an easy language, but the main reason is basically that it is pretty easy to come up with words in English. You take a French word, you modify its pronunciation to suit English ears and voilà, you are basically never out of words. Actually, it is also true for English speakers. Beware of faux-amis still...

      @lesfreresdelaquote1176@lesfreresdelaquote117610 ай бұрын
    • ​d "easy" is because of the proximity with french. I agree it does help, but in my opinion the very simplistic grammar and rather freeform syntax is what truely makes english a rather simple language. The only real difficulty of english is its thoroughly inconsistant pronounciation, which is a consequence of the many influences of the english language (french, german, latin).

      @math9172@math917210 ай бұрын
    • @@math9172 English is actually a pretty complicated language. The tense system is the most complicated of all European languages and is quite confusing for most foreigners. I have been speaking English in a professional context for 30 years. I even lived in England for a year. I still have some issues to understand the distinction between preterit and present perfect. One of my colleague was working on a project that was financed by the American side of our company. He said in.a meeting: "We worked on this project for two months" and the project was stopped. It took several days to explain the confusion out. I'm actually a computational linguist by trade and I have implemented grammars for many languages such as French, Italian, English or Japanese (see Xerox Incremental Parser for papers on these grammars). English has a very strict word order compared to most European languages, which is due to its lack of gender and case. Furthermore, English is a highly lexicalised language. The grammar of English was four times larger than the one of French or of Spanish to account to all its specificities. It is very easy to speak broken English, but it is also quite easy to speak broken Spanish.

      @lesfreresdelaquote1176@lesfreresdelaquote117610 ай бұрын
  • The Air Canada plane that ran out of fuel did have a fuel computer onboard. It was broken that day and a miscommunication meant the maintenance crew also switched off the backup so the ground crew had to manually calculate the fuel requirements. They were supposed to pick up a replacement part for the computer at their destination.

    @HuyLy94@HuyLy94 Жыл бұрын
  • I love that we all conveniently forget that it was Germans working for both the US & USSR space races

    @JamesThomas-zl9er@JamesThomas-zl9er Жыл бұрын
    • what else to expect? They had the first rocket program...

      @ft6637@ft6637 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ft6637 indeed, but surprisingly few people below 30 are aware of it

      @JamesThomas-zl9er@JamesThomas-zl9er Жыл бұрын
    • It’s a strange and dangerous place we’re living in

      @JamesThomas-zl9er@JamesThomas-zl9er Жыл бұрын
    • @@JamesThomas-zl9er You mean over 30? The older generations were given nationalistic propaganda.

      @NanoLT@NanoLT Жыл бұрын
    • Nasa works in metric

      @jamescharly6102@jamescharly6102 Жыл бұрын
  • base2 (binary) is natural for computers, base10 (decimal/metric) is natural for human brains, and Imperial is ... a mess

    @DaveWhoa@DaveWhoa Жыл бұрын
    • As far as we know the human brain has no bias towards a particular base. The preference for base 10 is societal/cultural and something that children have to acquire. This particular choice of base was probably influenced by having 10 fingers. But there have also been many cultures and there still are those that use a different base.

      @YellowBunny@YellowBunny Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@YellowBunny yup some culture had 12 as base if I remember correctly ancient Egyptians used 12, amd probably that's why we have 24h and 60 minutes, 360 degrees

      @einkar4219@einkar4219 Жыл бұрын
    • @@einkar4219 360 is a very neat number - can be divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, etc :) there's also a system where a circle has 400 degrees, which can be divided by 2, 4, 8, 16 (or 2 to the power of 1, 2, 3, 4^^)

      @MrWaffel@MrWaffel11 ай бұрын
    • @@YellowBunny Celts made 20 their base. Remnants of this can be seen today in french numerals and galician-portuguese traditional measures.

      @abelbouza1229@abelbouza122911 ай бұрын
    • @@YellowBunny True, in a binary system it would be best to use units that are double or half the amount of another unit, but since we already use a decimal system to count it just makes sense to use metric units.

      @luismauriciogonzalezcornej9448@luismauriciogonzalezcornej944811 ай бұрын
  • I think a great, easy place to start the switch to metric would be with groceries etc. Make it mandatory for manufacturers to label weight and volume in metric units on their products. Of course first by having both units, then maybe metric in a bigger font and then slowly getting rid of the imperial units.

    @chrisshf@chrisshf Жыл бұрын
    • All packages food in supermarkets in US have labels with both metric and imperial measurements. The metric units on products is required by law.

      @Foersom_@Foersom_ Жыл бұрын
    • People would riot.

      @Kalenz1234@Kalenz12343 ай бұрын
  • I am a Civil Engineer in Greece and I have seen the superiority of the Metric System in practice. The good thing is that in all Technical Universities is US teaching both systems but the most important is, the futures Engineers can see clearly the advantages of the Metric System. So, maybe in 30 or 40 years most of people in US maybe will use the Metric System.

    @Antuan2911@Antuan2911 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah. I'm using metric. But lets see, in USA, a foot is how many inches, a dozen? Silly. And 4 dozens is what, 38? Crazy math! 52??? Crazy muricans.

      @adipratia6861@adipratia686111 ай бұрын
    • The metric system has been used in STEM since forever but the average American still uses imperial units 🤷‍♂️

      @_blank-_@_blank-_11 ай бұрын
    • @@_blank-_ strange. That is not an argument, that a foot in length is about as big as my own foot. Then what is next? A mile is how long? Do i hear it? As long as what? As nothing! And you still talk about doing 90 mph on a highway haha. And why in the world you would say a dozen??? And 3 dozens is 42 pieces, heh, that is really silly. Counter intuitive as f.

      @adipratia6861@adipratia686111 ай бұрын
  • The most important reason why metric is the only scale worth using is that each unit of measure correleates to every other without any need for conversions. There is no need to try to solve different fractions when everything can be expressed in base 10 with far more precision.

    @andrewstrongman305@andrewstrongman305 Жыл бұрын
  • If you're able to figure out USD 1,- from a handful of coins, you know the metric system. 'Nuff said.

    @OhNoNotFrank@OhNoNotFrank Жыл бұрын
    • True, we should have adopted the decimal system of weights and measures that came with our decimal money, the Jefferson decimal system. Coinage Weights and Measures Plan of 1790, look it over.

      @Rack979@Rack979 Жыл бұрын
    • Impressive they havent done the same with coins. "56 cents in 1 dollar" or something completely impossible.

      @frosty6960@frosty6960 Жыл бұрын
    • @Frosty an even more impressive thing would be: 1$=56cents but 2$=87.849cents )))

      @Mr1SaS@Mr1SaS Жыл бұрын
    • Not to mention gigabytes, kilobytes and so on....

      @marcinduman2651@marcinduman2651 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Mr1SaS ROFL

      @VoidCosmonaut@VoidCosmonaut Жыл бұрын
  • The airplane story mentioned at 5:42 is nicknamed the Gimli Glider. I recommend looking it up; there are a number of videos on KZhead on it. The story is a bit more nuanced than what is mentioned in the video (understandably), but the differences between imperial and metric definitely played a big part in it.

    Жыл бұрын
  • Electronic Engineer here. Historical pin spacing on electronic components is 1/10th of an inch. SMD passives are specified in mm. So we must use both systems unfortunately. Cad software for electronics (cae) do support working with both and switching system on the fly. The need to shift system while designing is so frequent that the software I use dedicated the ALT key to temporary using the other system for numerical inputs, grid snaps and everything. Sometimes you have a screw terminal you can't tell even with caliper if it's 5.00mm pitch or 5.08mm pitch (2/10th of an inch). Both kind are vastly used in the industry. It can insert in the wrong pitched receptacles but not the best fit, but you can't really tell from insertion force what it is: wrong pitch or correct pitch and tight fit. It drives you crazy.

    @ideegeniali@ideegeniali10 ай бұрын
    • An M14 screw fits into a 5/8", but 5/8" is 15.875 mm, which is closer to 16mm. But the metric and imperial also have different standard spacings, with the metric being 1mm and imperial, well... larger. So to mix the 2, you have to think about how long will the screwing be to have a tight fix. If you need just a few turns, an M16 can be used in a 5/8", but if you need to go deeper, a rarer M15 is needed, or a common M14. If you need a very deep screwing, then you need to import the exact match. It's so frustrating to work with anything that has been touched by US manufacturing.

      @nydydn@nydydn3 ай бұрын
  • In the UK we use both lol. But the metric is definitely used more nowadays tbh. I was born in 2003 and I only use feet and inches for height and miles for distance. But I also use cm for height too as do most people I know and i never learnt to convert between the two, I was taught the difference when I was very young but not drilled. There really is a difference between generations because for example I’ll use kg and cms while my mum would use stone and inches and we both have no idea what we’re talking about 😂

    @justakathings@justakathings Жыл бұрын
    • I’ve noticed more and more guys weigh themselves in KG (including me). At least in my experience, women love Stone Age measurements still.

      @andyt8216@andyt8216 Жыл бұрын
    • I've heard of inches, feet, miles, ounce (even though i am confused between the 2 types) and stuff but stones are killing me. That just seems so funny as a measurement. I live in continental Europe.

      @bencze465@bencze465 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bencze465 it’s yet another national embarrassment!

      @andyt8216@andyt8216 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha I'm German and my dad is English. I have no clue of stones etc. So when his Wii asked me what my hight is I decided on a small number. Well.. the balance board did my weight so my mii ended up being a huge tiny blob and it kept saying how well I'm doing the exercises and I couldn't stop laughing

      @peterrabbitn787@peterrabbitn787 Жыл бұрын
    • Living in NI currently and the stone thing is so damn confusing 😅

      @ginonunes843@ginonunes843 Жыл бұрын
  • It's really weird that America uses more Imperial metrics than Britain does now. Britain is mostly metric (excluding a few weird remnants like miles and yards) even weight is mostly done in KG now instead of Stones and Lbs (the last time I needed to use St and Lbs I was very young in primary school my doctor always does it in KGs)

    @lewismackay9533@lewismackay9533 Жыл бұрын
    • Remember you're speaking of a country that needs to be told that coffee is hot and you don't put your dog in a microwave to dry it... So yeah they have to write things down

      @jash1281@jash1281 Жыл бұрын
    • apart from miles , yards and chainage used on the UK railway , hands and furlongs in horse racing , carpenters / cabinet makers use feet and inches , knots in shipping , farmers use acres , pints in brewing / pubs , stones and pounds in weighing each other .....

      @moonshineboy@moonshineboy Жыл бұрын
    • @@moonshineboy A large part of which is why Britain made the insane decision known as Brexit.

      @sualdammacsamildanach8154@sualdammacsamildanach815411 ай бұрын
    • Every friend of mine uses stone for weight, however, my grandson is weighed in kgs at the hospital.

      @izibear4462@izibear446210 ай бұрын
    • The USA has never used Imperial. It uses US Customary Measures, which are basically the measures used before the British Empire redefined their weights and measures in 1824 and called it the Imperial System. Gallons and tons are quite different in the two systems.

      @hypsyzygy506@hypsyzygy5062 ай бұрын
  • Fun fact: The "tonne" being a barrel originally is a german thing too. "Tonne" is a german word for barrel / drum. Commonly still used in compound words like "regentonne" = "rainwater barrel"

    @aenorist2431@aenorist2431 Жыл бұрын
    • A Danish Tønde=Tonne, is a messurement for area. So 1 tønde land = 14.000 kvadratalen = 0,55 hektar = 8 skæpper = 32 fjerdingkar = 96 album = 5.523,14 m² (1835: 5.516,10 m²). Glad we went metric to.

      @mcstaal@mcstaal Жыл бұрын
    • Similar in Sweden, a barrel is a "tunna". In Swedish "regentonne" is called "regntunna". "Tunnland" (which would be like "barrelland") is a measurement for area, which was basically how big area you could sow with one barrel of grain.

      @Asa...S@Asa...S Жыл бұрын
    • In Portuguese it happens as well. We have a word for "barrel", which is "tonel", and "tonelada" literally comes from "tonel". However that's actually a more archaic and ancient word - nowadays "barril" is used more. Which is even more interesting is that "barril" is actually a Celtic word of origin, coming from "barr" (a piece of metal), which was then imported to Western Romance and also English. "Tonel" comes from Ancient French "tonel" (nowadays "tonneaux"), which is a Germanic cognate.

      @diogorodrigues747@diogorodrigues747 Жыл бұрын
    • The British still use "tun" and "tundish" , barrel and funnel.

      @davepb5798@davepb5798 Жыл бұрын
    • In french we used "Tonneaux" for ship displacement before the general use of Short(metric) and Long(imperial) tons. As you might have guess "Tonneau" means Barrel. That at one time a standard "Tonneau" (of wine of course) was equivalent to 1000 liters is any one guess :). I mean it was most likely a multiple of a set number of bootles :))!

      @fredericlepeltier3435@fredericlepeltier3435 Жыл бұрын
  • "My car can tell me how far I can go" I am pretty sure your car gives you a rough estimate, does not have to take into account the total weight of the vehicle and changing air density (on which both the ground speed and the fuel consumption depend), and the worst that can happen if that estimate is wrong, you have to stop halfway through a highway and take a long walk to and from the nearest gas station. Planes... Kind of don't have that option. Could it be done? Probably. But as my grandfather once said, "The more complicated the system, the more elements it has, and the bigger the chance of something breaking".

    @Xoruam@Xoruam11 ай бұрын
    • You are correct that it is rough estimate, but that rough estimate is really precise. For starters, it just takes your fuel input and knows how much is in tank, averages it over 15minutes and presumes that you have same tempo. it iterates around that number every 1minute cycle. It is damn precise and self correcting system.

      @markoobrvan44@markoobrvan442 ай бұрын
  • One funny conversion thing I noticed when I (once again) heard someone say they always grow couple centimeters when they goto NHL. Referring to Finnish players who make it to the NHL. And in their stats they indeed gain a centimeter or two. And I once calculated and realised that the NHL converts their official metric system measurements into imperial for their official NHL stats, but when NHL stat page(as an example) shows their length in metric it is converted from the rounded (up) conversion to imperial. So they don't use the original measurements they convert the original metric into imperial -> round it up to feets and inches -> then convert it back to metric -> thus they "gain" a centimeter after going to the NHL.

    @teemup9247@teemup9247 Жыл бұрын
  • Your son just wanted to complain about the fact, that he has to learn about both systems and has to do a lot of "conversion stuff" in about 10 years at school... But if that's the only complaint he has, you're doing a geat job as parents....👍 On the other hand, if he becomes an engineer, he will bang his head against every firm structure, he has constructed an therefore had to convert between imperial and metric....😖

    @siggikalkmann@siggikalkmann Жыл бұрын
  • I work in Aeronautics and we have to deal with both units because of these guys.

    @Balinux@Balinux Жыл бұрын
    • You only have to deal with metric, because the Imperial units are based on PSI metric units anyway

      @LudwigVaanArthans@LudwigVaanArthans Жыл бұрын
  • 16:00 imagine earth as a country, and current countries as one person in the country - only 3 of 195 people understand imperial system of measurements

    @Thomas_Bjornsson@Thomas_Bjornsson8 ай бұрын
    • The USA uses US Customary Measures, not Imperial. Due to their histories, I suspect Liberia also uses US Customary Measures, but Myanmar would actually use Imperial.

      @hypsyzygy506@hypsyzygy5062 ай бұрын
  • I confess to a certain sadistic attitude/pleasure when dealing with "superior" Americans at business conferences over the years when the subject of gasoline and prices came up, especially when in Canada. Once I got going explaining metric to US measures to Imperial(UK) measures and then converting currencies and distances at the same time, their eyes would be glazed over. Oddly, they tended to stay away from me after that leaving the more sensible Americans to chat with and they tended to be quite lovely folks.

    @Sharon-bo2se@Sharon-bo2se11 ай бұрын
  • We still use both in the UK...you can buy fabric in metres or yards..... You go buy wood planks in metric measurements.... But we'll still say (example) we need 8 x 4"x2'"s at 2 metres long. Milk is sold in litres, but with pints listed on the bottle too. BTW did you know the USA pint and UK pint is different? The UK pint is bigger. Maybe other measurements are different either side of the pond too? Metric is much more accurate, and split into tinier increments. It's definitely better for that reason alone, accuracy, but it's also easier to work out in your head as everything is divisible by 10, 100 or 1000.

    @tamielizabethallaway2413@tamielizabethallaway2413 Жыл бұрын
    • Uk is an absolute measurement mess

      @mats7492@mats7492 Жыл бұрын
    • If you order a pint of beer in France you'll get half a pint by UK standards, I've always found that funny

      @Pointillax@Pointillax Жыл бұрын
    • The US took all things English and changed them. Take "color" as an example. Same thing but different 😉

      @101steel4@101steel4 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Pointillax really? I never knew that. I've been to France a LOT, but I don't drink beer so that's probably why I never realised? 😁

      @tamielizabethallaway2413@tamielizabethallaway2413 Жыл бұрын
    • @@101steel4 yes, and no. Did you know in fact that the American accent is closer to Olde English than any of our accents are? For the size of America, they have surprisingly few "accents" really. You could probably say a handful, West coast, New Yorker, Southern....Redneck 🤣 Compared to our 40+ and rising! Also, it's us who've modified our English more over the years. A lot of our words reflect the French way of spelling, in fact up until around 500 years ish ago, French was England's national language! During medieval times, spelling was not as important as it is to us today. I must admit I'm a stickler for things like spelling and I know for a fact I was reading and writing better at age 5-6 than a lot of kids leaving school at 16-18 can manage! 🙄 Right!? But back to a few hundred years back, spelling wasn't so strictly enforced as we do now. The main priority was that it was readable. If it read phonetically then it was considered correct. So colour, color, or even say, culler, would have been acceptable. You'd interpret the meaning of the word by the way it was written within the sentence. In time of course, with more invention and description came the need for more words. The language has tons more words now than it ever had back then and new words are added to the dictionary all the time. It's more important these days to be specific, for an example, there, their, and they're - or - to, too or two. The spelling of words these days is much more important because each spelling indicates something different. Remember also that back then, only a fraction of people could actually read and write, and of those who could, very few were women. Most scholars were men, and the types of women who would be educated were extremely wealthy, nobles, or even royalty. A good example is Anne Boleyn. Very highly educated and exceptionally intelligent. She had been sent to the royal court in Austria for a time, and spent many years as a lady in waiting in the French court too. Living abroad from around aged 8 in fact. She was skilled in social skills, riding, needlework, singing, lute playing, philosophy, theology, etiquette, diplomacy, dancing, and all academic subjects. Her reading and writing was excellent and her articulation was matched only by men. When she spoke, all eyes were on her. She spoke English and French fluently and could flip flop between the two effortlessly. She also knew some Latin. Her head was frequently stuck in a book, she was a sponge and had a thirst for knowledge. We still have a number of original documents written about her, to her, and from her. For example all the love letters between her and Henry VIII, but also notes added to Bible pages and poems that she wrote. She's a perfect example of my point, her spelling. There are letters sent home to her parents at Hever Castle from when she was at court in France, letters to friends or her letters to Henry. She would sign off as Anne Bullen, Anna Bolen, Anne Boleyn etc etc... So as you see, as long as it made phonetical sense to read, it was correct. This was around the 1500's period, around the same time Christopher Columbus discovered The New World. He wasn't the first of course. Vikings had gone there a good 500 years prior, but had stayed. Because they settled there, no one knew it HAD been discovered, so it was a new discovery as far as Europe was concerned at the time. Over the years more ships were sent to and from, obviously not a simple task, nor speedy. The first English settlement in America came around 100 years later, in Jamestown, Virginia. Remember that only a fraction of those people could read and write. Most of their knowledge was in practical skills, like farming, cooking, animal care, saddle making, boot making etc etc. They weren't stupid, but their weren't academic either. The English that they did know went with them, and the accent went with them too. They lost regular contact with England, and so their understanding of English, their spelling and grammar wasn't changing as quickly as it did in England, and it branched off there, as ours did here. So really, America hasn't changed our language anywhere near as much as we have since 400-500 years ago! Plus their language is influenced by Native American words, I mean we named places Jamestown, New York, Boston etc, all very boring. BUT Witchita, Oklahoma and Tennessee are Native American in origin. Then there's the Spanish and Portuguese flavour coming from South America, with place names such as Alhambra, Bonita Springs, Encinitas or Las Vegas etc. So in answer to your point....yes they have changed the English that they took with them, just as we changed that same English here, the difference is ours was influenced with German, French and Dutch. In conclusion, no, they haven't changed what we HAVE.... They changed what we HAD, as did we, in response to different influences from other languages. 😁

      @tamielizabethallaway2413@tamielizabethallaway2413 Жыл бұрын
  • Unfortunately, certain things are still measured in imperial units, even in Germany. Screen size is always given in Zoll (Zoll is the German word for inch) and cm, but Zoll is what people use when they talk about it. The same with all kinds of tires. And, of course standardized pipes for water, etc. are 1", 1/2", 3/4", etc. Even the colloquial word for that famous foldable ruler from Germany is "Zollstock" even though the measurements on it are in cm.

    @BennoWitter@BennoWitter Жыл бұрын
    • On a standard "Zollstock" you have both, as shown in the video

      @sirhenryvonvandings@sirhenryvonvandings Жыл бұрын
    • @@sirhenryvonvandings You are right, one with only Meters is called "Metermaß"

      @christiansonnenberg6306@christiansonnenberg6306 Жыл бұрын
    • Gliedermaßstab

      @unbekannterinterpret@unbekannterinterpret Жыл бұрын
    • Well, it's not like Germany invented the metric system or never had anything else. Here where i live, every other city had a different definition of what a mile is. You will also find definitions of length (like foot, knot, ellbow) ingraved into stones of minsters and churches of medieval cities, as markets were held around them - it was for people to have something to measure what the length definition is in that specific city, to prevent folks killing eacht other at the market for miscalculations and stuff. The metric system ist the one thing that the whole world should thank France for.

      @olgahein4384@olgahein4384 Жыл бұрын
    • @@olgahein4384 Otto the great standardized German units in 942, that's the main reason he is remembered as "the great". He was judging in a court case about breed weight fraud, and almost had a baker executed for defrauding his costumers. Then he realized that the baker had just used his own weights from his neighboring hometown. Since Otto, at least the pound was standardized in the Holy Roman Empire.

      @motionpictures6629@motionpictures6629 Жыл бұрын
  • Loved the cute baby interruption lol Also, here in NZ, while we use the metric system, and have done my whole life, it's still commonplace for people to talk about humans height in feet and inches.

    @The_Absolute_Dog@The_Absolute_Dog Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, it's often fun when creators leave in the little human touches. That was one seriously tall baby though.

      @shaggybaggums@shaggybaggums8 ай бұрын
    • Aye nice to see another kiwi in the comments! And yeah most people know their height in both metric and imperial, for example Im 180cm or 5ft 11in

      @avixs1543@avixs15432 ай бұрын
  • At many planes there is a procedure how to deal with a not working tank gauge. In each tank is a tool that tells what's the filling height in millimeter. This can be converted into liters. Flight calculation is done with kilogramm (or pound). The filling pump works with liters. They have to convert from volume into mass and later back from mass into volume.

    @michaelkonig5576@michaelkonig5576 Жыл бұрын
  • American currency is metric so the concept can't be difficult for them. They had a genuine gripe previous to our change over to decimal but the basics of metric can't be too alien, surely.

    @Captally@Captally Жыл бұрын
    • They use a lots of credit/debit card, the do not know even ho to count to 10

      @Lorre982@Lorre982 Жыл бұрын
  • Fun fact, in Sweden we have something called a "Scandinavian mile", which is basically just an old term used for the measurement of 10 kilometers, it's still used today though so don't be confused if a Norwegian, Swede or Finnish person gives you direction, they're still talking about metric measurements.

    @hachimaki@hachimaki Жыл бұрын
    • there's still nautical mile, and knot in sailing which is weird to me as they seem to be the only weird units that so many countries use... at least the only somewhat 'mainstream' ones i heard about

      @bencze465@bencze465 Жыл бұрын
    • so sic scandinavian miles would be 60 km?

      @sirhenryvonvandings@sirhenryvonvandings Жыл бұрын
    • @@bencze465 and the nautical mile is (or better was originally) defined as 1/60th of a degree of latitude, later then defined to be exactly 1852 meters

      @sirhenryvonvandings@sirhenryvonvandings Жыл бұрын
    • We call it "en dansk mil" because you know, the rest of you used to belong to us ;) 😅

      @louiseerbslisbjerg7854@louiseerbslisbjerg7854 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sirhenryvonvandings Yeah, 6 Scandinavian miles are 60 kilometres.

      @robinviden9148@robinviden9148 Жыл бұрын
  • Well, the origin of the meter and kg are still the chunk of steel, and the scratches on the iron bar in Paris, but are now expressed in physical constants that in principle you could determine anywhere.

    @feedingravens@feedingravens Жыл бұрын
  • I'm sure that someone else said this but, weight is a force and mass measures inertia

    @johnmilk534@johnmilk5343 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in the UK being familiar with and using both systems, which one I use today depends on how precise I need to be. If necessary, I can convert in my head. 1 mile = 1.61 kilometres.1 inch = 25.4 mm. Fahrenheit to Celsius, subtract 32 and multiply by 5/9

    @grahvis@grahvis Жыл бұрын
    • 1 mile = 1,609344 kilometre. Be precise :P

      @VoidCosmonaut@VoidCosmonaut Жыл бұрын
  • When I was in my teens out country switched from our old currency to the Euro. It took a while to get used to it, but it is nowhere near as a pain as some people in the US make it out to be to switch to metric. I'm into knives, and most of the media coverage is in inches and ounces... I've gotten used to that too. It really only takes a few years to make a full switch.

    @marcusott5054@marcusott5054 Жыл бұрын
    • Few years is a lot of time though

      @VoidCosmonaut@VoidCosmonaut Жыл бұрын
    • @@VoidCosmonaut It's really not as bad as it sounds. And I'm usually a person that's averse to change.

      @marcusott5054@marcusott5054 Жыл бұрын
  • 543 : The "Gimli Glider" was a fascinating near catastrophe averted by the fact that a) The aircraft's Captain was an experienced glider pilot, and b) the First Officer was a former Royal Canadian AirForce pilot who knew of a decommissioned airfield in the vicinity when they ran out of fuel. The airfield had been converted into a dragstrip and so yes, there were people nearby when the aircraft made an emergency landing; all the car enthusiasts and their families. In fact two young boys were frightened off the airfield/dragstrip when the aircraft came down. Yes, there _should_ have been a computer to warn the flight crew of the fuel shortage, but it was out of service at the time - just one of those things. There have been some docu-drama recreations of the event that are worth watching.

    @ozfoxaroo@ozfoxaroo4 ай бұрын
  • In The UK Imperial And Metric Are Both Used And Some People Measure Height In Feet And Inches But Some In Metres And Centimetres, Some Measure Volume In Litres, Centimetres And Millimetres But Some In Gallons And Pints, Sometimes Bushels And Quarts Too, Area Is In Hectares, Acres, Square Mile And Some In Square Kilometres, Weight (Mass) In Tonnes, Stone, Pounds And Ounces While In Metric It’s Tonnes, Kilograms, And Grams. In Distance/Lenth Metric Uses Kilometres, Metres, Centimetres And Millimetres While In Imperial Its Nautical Miles, Miles, Feet, Inches, Chains, Leagues, Hands, Furlong Etc.

    @NatickPlays@NatickPlays8 ай бұрын
  • We came close to converting to metric in the 70’s moving into the 80’s, but administration changes made the push lose steam and it just floundered. In school we were being taught how to change over.

    @chriskelvin248@chriskelvin248 Жыл бұрын
    • All cause of the dirty bugger, Reagan.

      @ElBandito@ElBandito11 ай бұрын
    • It's because of Reagan right? It's always because of Reagan 😑

      @_blank-_@_blank-_11 ай бұрын
    • That was over 40 years ago, you had plenty of time to convert since then but you didn't.

      @TheDennys21@TheDennys218 ай бұрын
  • The whole idea of the Base Units is that you can hand over the recipe how to built the measurement tool instead of handing over an actual tool to compare to. The second for instance was originally defined as the 86400th part of a solar day. But more precise measurements have shown that not all days (as the time passing between two noons) have the same length. Thus, another natural clock was searched for, and finally, Science settled on a specific hyperfine change in the electron orbits around a Caesium-137 atom. Similar for the meter: originally, it was defined as the 10,000,000th of the distance between the Northpole and the Equator, and a stick was made of that length. Later, it was found out that the stick was 2 millimeter off and too short. Now the meter is defined via the speed of light in a vacuum - a fundamental natural constant. Mass was always a problem, as Gravity is comparatively weak, and you need a probe the size of the Earth to pull on a kilogram of mass with measurable force (literally. Earth and a kilogram of mass pull on each other with a force of 9.81 Newton.) Thus, we know the size of Newton's Constant only for about 4 to 5 digits, very imprecise compared for instance to the strength of the Electromagnetic Force, which we know down to 18 digits at least. Hence, for about 200 years, Science had to do with a lump of metal, which was defined to have 1 kg of mass. (And then, it was noticed, that the lump slowly and steadily loses mass, but the copies sent out to the different nations don't.)

    @SiqueScarface@SiqueScarface Жыл бұрын
  • the beauty of the metric system is everything is in base 10 which makes it super easy to calculate everything

    @Antronix33@Antronix332 ай бұрын
  • I have a bit of clarification to throw in. The definition of an inch in mm or cm was made to define an inch in metric terms. It was to define how many mm/cm were in an inch. Prior to that people often used shortcuts (IE 2.5 instead of 2.54) to convert an inch to metric units, not a huge problem in normal use, but would cause issues in large scale projects as well as in machining parts that required close tolerances. I am comfortable using imperial or metric, so don't worry about it. It doesn't really mater what system you use, as long as you use the same system consistently. As a side note, I often use an old cloth reel type tape measure from the 40s,(fits comfortably in my pocket) that has stretched a bit over time, (1 inch over 12 feet) but as long as I use that tape to measure the part I need, and then use it to cut the part, everything goes fine. But if I measure a needed part with that tape, then cut it with a modern steel tape, it doesn't work so well.

    @merc2dogs@merc2dogs10 ай бұрын
  • 6:30 That happened shortly after the conversion of air canada to the metric system, therefore the pilots were not experienced in the conversion (and they did not have computers to help with the calculation). Also, the meassuring system within the plane was broken and the pilots decided to fly anyways. Otherwise they would have landed normally after noticing that they were low on fuel early on. So, there was much more involved than an antiquated system of measurement.

    @martinhuhn7813@martinhuhn7813 Жыл бұрын
    • If big things fail spectacularly a lot of small things didn't work before and a lot of people made decisions which in summ lead to the result.

      @KarlSanathos@KarlSanathos Жыл бұрын
    • That's on Air Canada for not following procedure and for the pilots for making a very irresponsible decision. It's a set rule within aviation that if a main computer fault is present the plane does NOT fly. Only minor computer faults like a confirmed incorrect message being stuck on screen for example is okay to fly with if checked. But if the computer isn't getting the fuel readout from the tanks and the FMC/MCDU didn't flag up an issue with the FLTPLN length and TRIP FUEL amount then that plane was not airworthy.

      @lewismackay9533@lewismackay9533 Жыл бұрын
    • yeah, the Gimli Glider incident (Air Canada flight 143)

      @joeschneider3427@joeschneider3427 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@lewismackay9533​The A320 in the video was illustration material. The incident happened in 1983, so not an A320 but a 767-200. Check the wikipedia article of the "Gimli Glider", the technical problem was a sensor, not the computer. The FMC only worked with entered data as the sensor was inop.

      @KyrilPG@KyrilPG Жыл бұрын
  • Best part of this video was JACE'S appearance!!!

    @dianen8962@dianen8962 Жыл бұрын
  • American public just needs to get with the programme and change from imperial to metric and Fahrenheit to Celsius. It will make life so much easier especially with dealing with anything outside of the US i.e most of the rest of the planet!

    @helenlecornu1651@helenlecornu1651 Жыл бұрын
    • Wait! There's civilization outside of America? (Many Americans don't seem to think so or at least think we do everything better)

      @StephenWilcoxon@StephenWilcoxon3 ай бұрын
    • @@StephenWilcoxon Yep it's there for the us to exploit in some way or other apparently...

      @helenlecornu1651@helenlecornu16513 ай бұрын
  • The ability of this man to immediately identify sponsored content in the end is envysome!

    @ixibittherus@ixibittherus8 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant. Yeah I remember doing decimal calculations in 1973 It’s much easier 🇦🇺

    @denisemangan1413@denisemangan1413 Жыл бұрын
  • ChatGPT got it correct. The "Tun" was the name of that type of barrel. Today, all the shipping containers are a standard size, weight and volume. The "Tun" barrel was that same sort of thing. Ship would be taxed etc. of how many tun barrels they could carry.

    @Yandarval@Yandarval Жыл бұрын
  • For example- bottled water in usa 16.9 oz is 0.5 liter in metric. 33.8 oz bottle is 1 liter. 1 liter of cold water has mass of 1 kilogram . Water freezes below zero degrees celsius and boils at 100 deg celsius.

    @martonko@martonko11 ай бұрын
  • I love your videos 😊👍 I am from Europe/Switzerland and it's funny to watch what americans think about us. so many things i did not notice because i thought we are so similiar. But i also have to say i didn't see what our diffrences are. and yes, the metric system ist far more practical and better. 1 m is 10 dm. 10 dm are 100 cm. 100 cm are 1000 mm. And we have tricks to make it easy to use for everyday. we do not say someone is 1.75 m tall. We just say 175 (one seventy-five) and everyone knows it is in centimeters. or for the body weight we just say 75 kilos (everyone knows it is not kilometers) and not 75 kilogramms or 75'000 gramms.

    @mariotunic7276@mariotunic7276 Жыл бұрын
  • We use both in the UK. Miles on the roads, height in feet and inches. Petrol by litre but miles per gallon 🤔

    @101steel4@101steel4 Жыл бұрын
    • Mish mash to say the least, road works 200 yards ahead etc, do young drivers even know the imperial system anymore, probably to some point l guess?

      @glennlingard7851@glennlingard7851 Жыл бұрын
    • You still have cousin marrying family as the head of the state. That's why.

      @nntflow7058@nntflow7058 Жыл бұрын
    • @@glennlingard7851 I mean, yard = meter for me. Not exactly but for daily life mostly good enough.

      @Londronable@Londronable Жыл бұрын
    • @@Londronable Yes, I use them interchangeably for general use.

      @andyhowlett2231@andyhowlett2231 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you - you were a good sport when it came to your 'chosen' method of measure. Yes it was pretty tongue in cheek but when you analyze the origin of the Imperial System - it is pretty funny. Whilst I adore Mythbusters, it always annoyed me when they used different measures, coz I always thought they would be more enlightened, and would have used Metric - for accuracy. But they were Americans, appealing to a mostly American audience - so there's that! Cheers mate from Australia.

    @muzzaball@muzzaball Жыл бұрын
  • Currency (10 base), Car engine volume (liter cube), Soda bottle volume (liter), Nutrition Label for food (calories, grams), Active component of Medicine (milligrams), not many people notice that US are using metric in these area.

    @tongkoliew@tongkoliew9 ай бұрын
  • RE the Air Canada crash and your question: “these guys just happened to be there?” It’s a wild story. Where they landed was an old Air Base near Gimli. Since the base was abandoned, the runway was used for Drag Racing, and there were people and cars literally on the runway who had to scramble when they realized it was trying to land. Look up “Gimli Glider”for more information

    @MrSpleenface@MrSpleenface Жыл бұрын
    • The co pilot was a former royal canadian Air force pilot who landed at Gimli Air Force base back in his military career who remembered where it was located And yes it was a converted drag track at the time The captain was an expirenced glider pilot who knew how to land an aircraft with no power in fact he used a known glider landing tactic known as a side slip to slow the plane enough to land... A crazy coiendence that saved everyone on board.... everybody got crazy lucky that day

      @superextempman@superextempman3 ай бұрын
  • When I arrived in California from France for the first time, that was in August, I was 18, and watched the weather report on TV for the first time there, I thought the end of the world had come, or at least, my world: 95° in Sacramento, 98° in Los Angeles, and (only) 88° in San Francisco ... What's happening here?, I should be roasting by now!!!! What's wrong? I had just totally forgotten that you guys used Fahrenheits, silly me. I think I will stick to my good old metric Celsius :), it's more reassuring 🙂

    @pierrecampel8077@pierrecampel8077 Жыл бұрын
  • This is like asking a scientist if $1 is more useful than $100 if found on a street.

    @freudenberg101@freudenberg10111 ай бұрын
  • In Mexico we use a mixture of units for engineering. For daily use the metric system is everywhere (cars, shampoo bottles and so on), but for engineering we use lots of stuff we bring from the US. Need a motor for your machine? You may select it based on the hp power you require. Nevermind kW. Screws and W-beams use inches, we calculate psi and cfm, but if you need to paint an area people will tell you its size using meters. LOL. As engineers here we usually need both and fast conversions.

    @-PimientaNegra-@-PimientaNegra- Жыл бұрын
  • The hunk of metal defining 1KG had a real world problem they couldn't figure out how to get around for a while. Gravity on earth is not the same everywhere, because of the spin of earth being different when it comes to how close to the equator you are. The planet spins slowest at the poles, and fastest at the equator, so depending on where that hunk of metal was made, it's weight would change slightly if you flew it somewhere else, which is a real problem when it resulted in a definition that could change, depending on where on the planet you are at the time...

    @skynet0912@skynet09128 ай бұрын
  • Other ways Americans use metric, some of which they know, others they don't: 1) When drugs are seized, they're routinely measured in kilograms. 2) Soda is often sold in 2 liter bottles (the big ones). 3) Medicine dosage via syringe is given in CCs... a 'cubic centimeter'.

    @robindude8187@robindude8187 Жыл бұрын
    • Look at any website for a USA grocery store and it shows the composition of the food on sale. The composition (fat, carbohydrate, sugar, etc.) is shown in grams and sometimes the percentage (of the metric weight) but the package size is ounces! That really is screwed up.

      @nevillemason6791@nevillemason67912 ай бұрын
  • every single person in the world understands counting 1 to 10 no matter what language is spoken, this is what makes Metric the obvious choice.

    @ukdnbmarsh@ukdnbmarsh Жыл бұрын
    • i see someone doesn't know some languages dont have base 10.

      @jmwintenn@jmwintenn Жыл бұрын
    • Freaking French has something to do with base 20 and they were the pioneers on this thing

      @echinas0908@echinas0908 Жыл бұрын
    • even the folk that create the standard units of measure for the Imperial system base it off of metric PSI units of measure, so..

      @LudwigVaanArthans@LudwigVaanArthans Жыл бұрын
    • @@echinas0908 nobody likes the french so yeah

      @ukdnbmarsh@ukdnbmarsh11 ай бұрын
  • Very fun to watch, thanks for the video

    @rewrose2838@rewrose283811 ай бұрын
  • I believe it's really a matter of habit whether one works with the metric system (SI system, the international system of units) using kilo-, centi-, deci-, or (standard) meters, or prefers the US system with inches, feet, yards, and miles, or even the British system with inches, feet, yards, miles, chains, and furlongs. The most important thing is that all parties involved agree on a standard measurement system. Here, I'd like to refer to the example of NASA's 'Mars Climate Orbiter' project from 1999. In this project, the force in pounds was incorrectly translated into the metric system, resulting in the spacecraft going off course and being lost. Ultimately, it’s a matter of understanding and uniformity in the application of measurement systems - or as I like to call it: a matter of mathematical comprehension. Best regards from Austria!

    @MikeDerUnwissende2@MikeDerUnwissende24 ай бұрын
  • As a Canadian, I'm 129lbs, 5'7". I've never weighed things in metric, but I use metric in everything else. Although sometimes I use feet because it's easy to measure with feet. Things like Fahrenheit and miles confuse me.

    @webbiess6@webbiess610 ай бұрын
  • Italian, one of my boggest problem playing d&d is having to deal with the imperial system 😂

    @DaAvalon1@DaAvalon111 ай бұрын
  • There's an "Air Disasters" episode about the "Gimli Glider." And yes, it ran out fuel and they had to glide it into a decommissioned Canadian air base which had converted the old runway into a drag strip. And people were out racing that day. So, yeah, there's pictures and video of it. When I was taking chemistry and physics in college, EVERYTHING was Metric. Grams (mass), meters, newtons (weight / force), etc. Yeah, it took some doing to wrap my head around it all but, at the very least, changing between units of length was just moving the decimal place round (cm vs meters vs km). Heaven forbid that you need to figure out how many stone (weight) so many feet (length) from the hinge resulted in so many pound-feet of torque.

    @Meower68@Meower688 ай бұрын
  • The gun is often 5.56mm or 9mm or 10mm. Or 75mm, 105mm, 120mm, 155mm etc... Shotguns are usually still by gauge (sphere of lead which can be made 'gauge' number of times from a pound mass of lead), and the rest as fractions of an inch (often as an explicit conversion of a metric size, or a unique 'off' measure to make it short-hand to describe a calibre, which can't be measured by caliper any longer because of the fudging..

    @gracesprocket7340@gracesprocket73403 ай бұрын
  • Liberia was founded by former black slaves from the U.S. and the Caribbean- it’s not a coincidence that the flag is so similar.

    @Dr_KAP@Dr_KAP Жыл бұрын
  • Fun fact: Germany used to have "meilen / miles" as units ... and BEFORE UNIFICATION IN 1871 ... there were loads of different miles that were sometimes significantly different. We realised this ... and for this reason INVENTED THE NORM!

    @Muck006@Muck006 Жыл бұрын
    • You mean the DIN norm that was then blatantly copied into the international ISO norm. Not the metric system itself, which was practically invented by the french.

      @olgahein4384@olgahein4384 Жыл бұрын
    • It's said that the English conception that Napoleon was a short guy is based on that the English and French used a different definition of the inch

      @Lttlemoi@Lttlemoi6 ай бұрын
    • In Sweden we still use "mil", but because the original was so arbitrary we just defined it as 10 kilometers. 😁

      @Merecir@Merecir4 ай бұрын
  • I think we can make this whole "Foot" idea even better. Why use square feet when a foot also has an surface area. And why use cubic feet when feet have volume? So we keep feet for length, we use feet for area, and use feet for volume.

    @RBRT02@RBRT0210 ай бұрын
  • Metric system is just that simple and consistent

    @aldyzero6676@aldyzero6676 Жыл бұрын
  • Bananas (imperial system) are fine if you deal with technologiy on the level of the amish. At a higher level you trip yourself with bananas.

    @besenwieslersepp1011@besenwieslersepp1011 Жыл бұрын
  • What is even worse, is the measurement used to describe the thickness of wires. In the metric system we just use it like this "this wire is 1mm in diameter", which is easily measurable with a caliper gauge. Not so in America: The (nearly) same wire according to AWG will be described as "how often the wire is pulled through thinning holes, in this case 18. I said nearly same wire, because an 18G (AWG) wire reflects to a wire with a cross section of 1mm², which has a diameter of 1.024 mm

    @AlexSommerer@AlexSommerer Жыл бұрын
  • The problem of using an amount of material for weighting stuff is, that even that amount of weight is not necessarily constant. It can change over time. In fact, the hunk of metal used to define a kilograms lost 50 micrograms of weight since it was created. Using electricity measurements is way more accurate.

    @MichaelW.1980@MichaelW.19809 ай бұрын
  • on another note, The Real Engineering channel is absolutely mindblowing. If you want to know more about many engineering things (like a very detailed breakdown of the Awesome engineering of the M1 Abrams), this channel is a goldmine

    @DJRaffa1000@DJRaffa10009 ай бұрын
  • I'm a US citizen born and raised and I'm an industrial designer, I use both the metric system and the imperial system, but never together, though I could I know how to convert between the two, but it just makes more sense to stick to one for a project. If someone says they want something designed within a certain number of inches or feet I use the imperial system, if someone wants something designed within a certain number of centimeters or meters I use the metric system. But as far as cooking goes, I'm imperial all the way.

    @D2SProductions@D2SProductions Жыл бұрын
    • imperial=outdated and gey

      @luciferthegod3214@luciferthegod32142 ай бұрын
    • Don't you use US Customary Measures?

      @hypsyzygy506@hypsyzygy5062 ай бұрын
    • When you're cooking, remember that the Imperial pint is 1¼ US pints if you're following a UK recipe.

      @hypsyzygy506@hypsyzygy5062 ай бұрын
    • @@hypsyzygy506yes, I cook using US measurements, thanks for the info, I didn't know there was a difference between US pints and UK pints.

      @D2SProductions@D2SProductions2 ай бұрын
  • I remember as a kid switching from imperial to metric. It wasn't hard and was seamless. Strangely though, we still ask how many pounds a baby is when it's born.

    @rosaliemccallum@rosaliemccallum Жыл бұрын
    • Ok but where are you from?

      @TheDennys21@TheDennys218 ай бұрын
  • love the random baby visits and other fun things that happen as you work from home.

    @carked5707@carked570710 ай бұрын
  • I just accidentally found your channel, It's brilliant and very entertaining. Wondering if you have a video comparing how the US and European cities are designed.

    @MrSankullo@MrSankullo Жыл бұрын
  • the funny thing is, that in a lot of parts of germany the folding ruler is called zollstock (inch stick) no matter if there is only mm on it. in the south you find the term meterstab (meter bar). the real term would be gliedermaßstab but nobody cares.

    @nikomangelmann6054@nikomangelmann6054 Жыл бұрын
    • In Denmark we call it "Tommestok" meaning "Inch-stick" and usually there's cm's on one side and European standard inches on the other, just for funsies ;)

      @louiseerbslisbjerg7854@louiseerbslisbjerg7854 Жыл бұрын
  • i find that the americans are soo much in the past and dont like change

    @bill53uk@bill53uk Жыл бұрын
  • Weight is a force that depends on gravity, so it is different depending on if you're on the earth or on the moon. Mass is the same even on the moon.

    @jd-dev@jd-dev8 ай бұрын
  • Speaking as an Englishman of a certain age who grew up with both systems: Horses for courses - I would suggest that for any meaningful measurement or calculation the metric system is far superior. However, the imperial system tends to make more day-to-day sense and has greater flexibility in partitioning of whole amounts. I use metric for nearly everything. But will use imperial when considering human-scale measurements, or for divvying up. Given both systems are fully functional, the most important thing is not to mix them up. (NASA!) Also a lack of familiarity is a common source of errors - stick with what you know best, but be sure you understand both systems.

    @charlesjmouse@charlesjmouse4 ай бұрын
  • G'day Ryan, When Americans whinge about Metric being too hard I like to ask them "🤔so how do you count your money?" It was awesome that he also mentioned that Imperial Measure is actually based on Metric too, none of the Freedum Unit Whingers I have conversed with have know this or that Imperial like the English Lanuage is not a USA Invention🤦‍♂.

    @shaneeslick@shaneeslick Жыл бұрын
    • When other people whine about the Imperial system, I ask, so how do you count your time?

      @rizon72@rizon72 Жыл бұрын
    • The Act that gave us our decimal money also had decimal weights and measures as well, written by Thomas Jefferson himself. True Freedom Units! Jefferson's foot is pretty close to 1 light-nanosecond, meaning a quantum version of the Jefferson decimal system could just define the speed of light to be 1 billion Jefferson feet per second, then build the system up from there.

      @Rack979@Rack979 Жыл бұрын
    • The USA has never used Imperial measures anyway.

      @hypsyzygy506@hypsyzygy5062 ай бұрын
    • @@hypsyzygy506 So the Day America was change from UK to it's Own Government the new Government threw out all Measures being used & implemented a whole new system ???

      @shaneeslick@shaneeslick2 ай бұрын
  • The metric system was one of the greatest archievments of mankind.

    @kalzium8857@kalzium8857 Жыл бұрын
  • The Gimli Glider incident was in 1983, and the aircraft, a Boeing 767 was the first in Air Canada's fleet to use all metric instruments (except the altimeter, since altitude is measured in feet), and the ground grew were used to doing the pounds/litre measurement. But the computers on modern planes use the WEIGHT (not volume, since a plane doesn't care about that) since the weight is needed to determine takeoff power and length, so 22,500kg was what the computer THOUGHT it had when it ACTUALLY had less than half that. 6:50 You can't use vehicle style fuel guages (which were designed for a vehicle on roughly level ground) in a plane since climbing, landing and banking change the fuel levels at different places in the tank.

    @ydenneki@ydenneki Жыл бұрын
  • Weight is a force and is thus measured in newtons, F = m * G where m is the mass and G is your local gravitational constant, which differs from place to place, even on earth's surface. Mass is a property of matter and remains the same even if it is weightless in space or free fall. Mass is what gives objects their inertia. For example if you have a train in space it would be just as hard as on earth to get it moving by pushing against it if where was no friction on earth.

    @FalcoGer@FalcoGer Жыл бұрын
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