You will never (well hardly ever) see a road in the United Kingdom warning
of a hazard that is X feet away.  Our road engineers, on the advice of our
government, use yards instead - we must be the only country to use yards for
road measurements  and you guys the only country to use feet!  Sounds like a
replay of the gallon scenario.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Michael Payne
Sent: 28 March 2013 12:42
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:52565] Re: frames of reference in the metric world

 

If yards, feet and inches were good at estimating distance why is it that
things are estimated in "football fields" long in the USA? As big as "Rhode
Island" is irksome, most people never having been to Rhode Island, how would
they know how big it is?

 

Seems to me the meter is perfect for estimating any length, be it the 100 m
length of a football field to the length of a battleship, the size of a room
and the distance to the next exit. I have a very good Map app on my iPad
"Navigon" that I have set up with voice commands in metric, it states turn
left in 300 m, 100 m, 30 m, etc. Even my non metric wife has no problem
using it. It also give a lot of context to an appreciation of the metre
because the unit remains the same at 2000 metres or 20 metres. In Wombat it
changes from miles to feet. I watched a TV program the other day that showed
a moving map that showed turn left in 325 feet, I had to rewind the DVR
because I thought it odd that it said 325 instead of 300 feet. (hidden
metric?) turns out it was counting down in feet.

 

On another note, 10 square feet is close enough to 1 square metre that it
allows you to price carpet, wood floors etc in something more appropriate,
$1,40/ft2 would be $14/m2, I find it very easy to visualise a square metre
and hence the price of carpeting a room, 5 x 6 m roughly 30 m2, $420
roughly.

 

Mike Payne

 

 

On 23/03/2013, at 19:18  , Paul Trusten <[email protected]> wrote:





In her article
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/2013/03/21/metric-system_n_2923997.h
tml, ila Nordstrom states that she believes customary units are better for
estimating the dimensions of things in everyday life.  How do those of you
in countries where the metric system predominates think and speak in meters?
What  language do you use?  If, for example, you are comparing the height of
a refrigerator to your own height, do you think of it as being "several
centimeters" different from you height? 

 

 

Paul

 

 

 

Paul R. Trusten
Registered Pharmacist
Vice President and Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
www.metric.org
[email protected]
+1(432)528-7724

 

 

 

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