> For myself, I have a good concept of how long a foot (or yard, or
> inch) is, and I don't have that same familiarity with a meter or
> centimeter even though I have worked with metric units in engineering
> circles for over 30 years of my life.

Hmmm ... I think everyone's experience is different. In the mid 60's, in another part of the world from where I live now, everything was metric and I learned it. I really didn't care about what was divisible by what (although I graduated in Math, and you'd think I would be), but ever since and still now, I tend to think in metric terms and convert the other way. My speedometer reads in MPH, but it also has KPH. Ask me how far to the tracks of the Transcontintal Railroad from our house, and I'd probably give you the answer in approximate meters. I know what a meter is, I know a kilogram, and it does work.

I wonder how much it matters how it was defined and re-defined, the metric system is the worldwide standard, and we hams have been using it for years.

YMMV

Fred K6DGW
Auburn CA CM98lw

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