Tyre/tire pressure gauges in Canada are calibrated in kPa.

John F-L
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Martin Vlietstra 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Thursday, August 25, 2011 7:37 AM
  Subject: [USMA:51015] RE: Millimetres of Mercury & Millibars of air pressure.


  Hi John,

   

  The SI Brouchure (8th edition) has a section "Non-SI units accepted for use 
with the SI, and units based on fundamental constants" which can be found at 
http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter4/4-1.html.  This leads into Table 
8 of the brochure where the use of "mm Hg" for the measurement of blood 
pressure is specifically catalogued as being a permitted deviation from "pure 
SI".  The underlying reason is that this unit of measure is used across the 
entire globe.  If the Australian medical profession were to go it alone and use 
kPa for measuring blood pressure, and Australian medical staff were dispatched 
to help in a disaster zone, they would have problems communicating with their 
colleagues from other countries.

   

  Air pressure is a different thing - bars convert to kPa by moving a decimal 
point.   

   

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
John Candido
  Sent: 25 August 2011 03:15
  To: U.S. Metric Association
  Subject: [USMA:51014] Millimetres of Mercury & Millibars of air pressure.

   

  Hi, I live in Australia and we are predominantly a metric nation.  However, 
we have not been consistent with things such as the measurement of blood 
pressure in medicine and air pressure in meteorology.  The measurement of blood 
pressure in millimetres of mercury instead of kPa (kilopascals) is a prime 
example of this inconsistency.  A normal blood pressure reading for an adult in 
millimetres of mercury is 120 on 80, and its equivalent in kPa is 16 on 10.  In 
addition, what about the measurement of air pressure in millibars, which is the 
current method?  Will this be converted to hectopascals of air pressure in the 
future?  Thank you.         

   

  Sincerely yours, John Candido.  

   

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