I will see your measuring cup and raise you The Perfect Beaker(tm).  It should 
be renamed The Horrible Beaker and it is all compounded by having been made in 
Germany.  (I bought it because it pushed a total into the free shipping range 
and cost less than paid shipping).
 
It is quite conical, but sits on a wider base.  This gives more resolution for 
lower values.  Nice shape, only the scales are horrible.  The circumference is 
divided into six fan-shaped zones (about 50° of arc), each having two related 
scales.  The zones are separated by about 10°
 
Fan 1:  Pints by quarters, two identical scales.  American recipes may 
occasionally reference whole pints, rarely fractions, and the UK pint is a 
different size.  What is the point?
 
Fan 2: Cups.  One scale is by quarters, the other by thirds with the odd 
addition of 1/8 and 1 1/8 cups
 
Fan 3: Fl oz (marked OZ). One scale is all the even values, 2-16, the other, 
all the odd values 1-15.  Given the separation, it would be hard to estimate a 
half ounce.
 
Fan 4: Tablespoons. One scale is by gradations of 4 Tablespoons (+2 Tablespoons 
only is marked).  Second scale has 3 T, 6 T, then in increments of 4 T.
 
Fan 5: Teaspoons.  One scale is marked 6, 18, 30, 42, 54, 66, 78, 90, 100.  The 
other 12-96 t in 12 t increments.
 
Fan 6: Milliliters, mismarked ML/CCM.  One scale is 40 - 480 mL with 40 mL 
gradations.  The other is 60 - 500 mL, with 40 mL gradations, plus a mark at 30 
mL.

--- On Mon, 11/9/09, [email protected] <[email protected]> 
wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:46139] Rubbermaid gets it wrong --- and makes the case for metric
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, November 9, 2009, 1:58 AM



#yiv1520613666 p {margin:0;}

I'm staying at a residence hotel while visiting my company's headquarters in 
Silicon Valley for a bunch of meetings. They provide a small kitchen and some 
basic utensils to cook with.

One item that caught my eye is the Rubbermaid measuring cup in metric and US 
Customary. I wrote Rubbermaid that ML is not the right symbol for a 16 fluid 
ounce measuring cup. I hope they fix such errors on all their products.

However, the more striking thing to me is that the USC measures are listed 
side-by-side in ounces (1 to 16), pints (1/3, 2/3, 1/2, then again 1/3, 2/3, 
and 1 PT, plus cups (1/4, 1/2, 3/4, 1C, 1/4, 1/3, 3/4, 2C). Beside the 
confusion (for me) of repeating the same measures twice between 1/2 PT and 1PT 
and again between 1C and 2C, the thing I notice the most is the weird 
multiplicity of units that don't connect with each other in any coherent way. 
Contrast this with the metric measure (wrongly labeled in ML, of course) that 
has a single vertical line marked this way:

100 ML
200 ML
300 ML
400 ML
500 ML

Aside from the fact that it should be 100 ml, etc. (or 100 mL), what could be 
cleaner and simpler? It's like the cup almost screams out to say: You want 
convoluted? Use USC!!! You want simple? Use metric!

Or at least that's how I see it ....   :-)

Ezra

Reply via email to