On 18 Aug 2011, at 19:53, mike cook <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> When the UK converted to metric weights, large numbers of shop owners were 
> convicted and fined for selling goods on a non existent weight scale 
> (imperial pound and ounces) instead of kilogrammes., even though the scales 
> were accurate.

Please report information to a higher standard than the Daily Mail and News 
International.

Shop keepers in the UK are allowed to advertise goods using old measures so 
long as they also use standard measures. We have been using the two systems of 
units in parallel for decades, gradually converting in keeping with the 
traditional British fudgey incremental change. The old measures are not 
nonexistent in any sense.

Note that "imperial" refers to the metric-style measures of volume defined in 
1824. Pounds and ounces are avoirdupois.

The US customary measures are older than the imperial system. The most extreme 
example is the Winchester Bushel used for measuring volumes of grain, and this 
unit dates back over 1000 years.

Tony.
--
f.anthony.n.finch  <[email protected]>  http://dotat.at/
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