You have a right to your views, no matter how quirky, but I would credit Martin 
with a little more intelligence on this particular subject and why the UKMA are 
as concerned as they are.
If you would like to tell me - OFF THE LIST - what I have said in my account of 
the birth of my son which has rattled your cage then I will be happy to explain 
my findings to you.
Finally, please quit the "He knows as well as I do" stuff.  I don't follow your 
thinking and at times I feel I'm in a different country to you despite you 
saying you're from the UK although I do remember your role in regards to your 
following around of 'Neil Heron' so I am assured you do live in the UK.
That's all I have to say on the subject but as I say I am more than happy to 
discuss any point in detail with you off the list however any provocation 
surrounding 'how metric the UK is' will be ignored by myself and I hope taken 
with a metric pinch of salt by USMA supporters here. 
So on this topic - "OVER AND OUT!" 

P.S. I hope you are doing you bit for charity with the heavily advertised 
'sport relief' events all over the UK? ;-)  (Yet another ad on TV reminded me 
of this as I wrote this - yes it is on topic folks but rather cryptic, but not 
as cryptic as another contributor to this forum with his signature taglines and 
possessing the longest hair here!! )

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:46800] Re: babies produced, UK
Date: Sun, 28 Feb 2010 19:36:45 +0000














Martin, it's probably unwise to bite at Mr 
Humphreys stirring of his large wooden spoon.
 
He knows as well as I do that the UK is 
largely metric now apart from a few exceptions.  Our roads are probably the 
main thing to largely use imperial units.
 
I don't think for a moment he believes the 
fantasies he tries to pass off on this message board that the UK is still 
largely imperial.
 
Yes, many older people will still tend to think 
automatically in imperial units.  This is largely because of dithering 
governments over the years not fully enforcing metric standards because of 
misguided "patriotic" allegiences to the pint, the inch and the 
mile.
 
As I've said before, ask most Brits under 30 "how 
many yards in a mile" or "how many pounds in a stone" and the vast majority 
will 
not have a clue.
 
I have to say, apart from a certain number of US 
imports with floz on them (which are quite possibly illegal) I've never saw 
anything actually made in this country with floz printed on it since I was 
a teenager...and believe me, that was quite a number of years ago.
 
This country is easily 90-95 per cent metric.  
Don't believe any claims to the contrary.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  Martin Vlietstra 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Friday, February 26, 2010 9:10 
  PM
  Subject: [USMA:46774] Re: babies 
  produced, UK
  

  
  It might interest 
  readers to know that the matter of hospital scales was debated in the British 
  House of Lords this week.  A full transcript of the debate can be found 
  at 
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200910/ldhansrd/text/100225-0001.htm#10022584000562.
 
   One of the important comments was “Does she [the minister] further 
  understand that last year, LACORS, the Local Authorities Co-ordinators of 
  Regulatory Services, carried out a major survey that found that 30 per cent 
of 
  weighing machines in hospitals were switchable between metric and imperial 
  units and that a staggering 10 per cent were permanently switched to imperial 
  units only?”  Steve, since the surgeon and midwife who delivered your 
  son discussed his weight in imperial units, would this place the hospital in 
  the 10% who keep their scales permanently switched to imperial units?  
  For the sake of your family’s health I trust not – such action are indicative 
  of poor management.  
   
  The following comment 
  was also made: “Is she aware that the importance of this topic 
  relates to the fact that the dosage of many powerful drugs is now calculated 
  according to the weight in kilograms of the recipient? If, in error, such a 
  calculation used imperial units, there would be a serious risk of 
under-dosage 
  or, more importantly, major over-dosage”. 
  The Government will be issuing a statement shortly on the matter – I only 
  trust that hospitals will take heed of the advise and not wait to be rapped 
  over the knuckles by a coroner following in incorrect dosage caused for 
  instance by a the scales reading 11 stone 4 lbs and somebody recording that 
as 
  114 kg.  (For the record 11 st 4 lbs is 71 
  kg).
   
  Comment sponsored by 
  the UKMA can be found at http://www.metricviews.org.uk.
   
   
  
  
  
  
  From: 
  [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Stephen 
  Humphreys
Sent: 23 February 
  2010 22:04
To: U.S. Metric 
  Association
Subject: 
  [USMA:46745] Re: babies produced, UK
   
  I'm watching Derren Brown on TV, 
  Martin - are you following his footsteps in the psychic department? 
   ;-)
  
   
  
  Yes - we had a boy by C-section 
  9 months ago!  Ta-da!!!!
  
   
  
  Some points to keep on topic 
  (and you only have my word on this but I hope you take into consideration 
  other points I've made in the past!)
  
   
  
  This in on reflection - I was 
  otherwise pre-occupied at the time!  And speechless! (40 mins earlier I 
  was 'safely' at work none the wiser).
  
   
  
  When he was born he was put on 
  some scales which were metric - the nurse said "he's a good weight for 1 
month 
  early"
  
  The C-section surgeon (and this 
  is important) who was *not British* asked how much he weighed.  The nurse 
  responded "6lb 3" to which the surgeon said - "that's 
  good".
  
   
  
  His (the baby's) records have an 
  entry for both metric and imperial throughout.  I have no doubt that the 
  'official' figures are metric but the records show 
  both.
  
   
  
  Before he was born my wife went 
  for a blood test at the hospital.  I saw the needle.  Let me explain 
  - I have a needle phobia.  Immediately I had to leave the room.  I 
  wandered about but started feeling faint (I've never fainted but I felt very 
  heavy and not at all well but at least I was in the right place).  To get 
  my mind off the needle I looked at an adult weighing machine.  The units 
  ON the machine were metric.  There was a plastic coated sign on the wall 
  immediately behind the scales which translated it to 
  st/lb.
  
   
  
  Finally - we are members of an 
  NCT group.  Without fail the mothers all used floz when making up mixes 
  or expressing.  With the milk formula that's not surprising as the 
  instructions on the side read downwards under the floz column as 
1,2,3,4,5,6,7 
  with the millilitre figures next to it in 
  hundreds.
  
   
  
  I have no doubt that official 
  records record the metric weight however without fail all the people involved 
  "spoke" imperial.
  
   
  
  Dilation would have been in 'cm' 
  though - if it were not an emergency!!
  
   
  
  P.S.  One for the books - 
  the missus WHILST IN LABOUR AND HAVING CONTRACTIONS drove to the hospital 
  filling up with fuel on the way.
  
  When I called her back at home 
  from work surprised to find her still at home (considering she had called me 
  saying she did not feel 'right') she said that she hadn't put make up on 
  yet!!
  
   
  
  "Women" 
  !!!
  
  
  
  From: [email protected]
To: 
  [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:46741] Re: metric products 
  UK
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 
  21:40:14 +0000
  
  A small note about 
  scales used for measuring people in the UK.  
  
   
  Scales that are 
  destined for domestic use have invariably been dual-unit since the 1970’s. 
   However since a report last year that criticized certain hospitals for 
  using domestic quality scales that had not been properly maintained was 
  published, it has become mandatory for the medical profession to use 
  professional-quality scales (which are regularly recalibrated) and which show 
  kilograms only.  Official medical records are kept in metric units, 
  though a baby’s birth-weight might be communicated to the parents in either 
  units.  Steve Humphries is more up-to-date than me on that – he became a 
  father in the last year or two.  The weights of my children (born 1980’s) 
  was certainly communicated to me in metric units – 3.50 kg and 
  4.05 kg.  I do not recall the imperial equivalents nor do I recall 
  having been given them.
  
  
  
  
  From: 
  [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Stephen Davis
Sent: 23 February 2010 20:25
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:46739] Re: metric products 
  UK
   
  
  The vast majority of things in the 
  UK are fully metric, 
  John.
  
   
  
  The only time you will really see 
  mixed units is with loose goods like fruit and veg on market stalls.  The 
  metric measurement must be more pronounced than the imperial 
  measurement.  This is largely academic since these items must be weighed 
  on fully metric scales anyway.  Pints of beer, of course, are the only 
  real fully imperial item in the UK.
  
   
  
  Scales that measure people (in 
  stones: 14 pounds) will probably mentioned by some, but the majority of 
recent 
  ones also weigh in kilograms as well.
  
    
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    
    
    From: John 
    Frewen-Lord 
    
    To: U.S. Metric 
    Association 
    
    Sent: 
    Tuesday, February 23, 2010 2:47 PM
    
    Subject: 
    [USMA:46734] metric products UK
    
     
    
    To all those who say that the 
    UK is not really 
    metric:
    
     
    
    I was researching the town of 
    Axminster on 
    Google, and came across this website regarding hydraulic bricquette 
    presses.  All specs as far as I can see are in metric 
    units.
    
     
    
    
http://www.axminster.co.uk/product-Rojek-BrikStar-50-Hydraulic-Briquette-Press-582182.htm
    
     
    
    John F-L
   
  
  
  
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