pingvinlakrits
Member
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2007
- Messages
- 1,093
Sorry Nick, I don't really buy into that guy or the arguments. From the link provided:
"Did you ever watch a seamstress measure cloth from her nose to her fingertips? That human dimension is normally about 36" or a "yard of cloth". It would take a basketball player with arms over 3" longer to measure meters that way." ??? He uses very vague descriptions to prove a point of Imperial being superior to metric just shows he does not grasp the concept of metric. There are umpteen for the americans unknown similar vague measurements that have been with us from medieval times... ...long before the settlers arrived to America. Here in Sweden we have quite a few that most Swedish people haven't heard of in this generation, I happen to know some of them as I like history.
And saying metric doesn't break down nicely - well I don't know. The tooling industry and carpenters in the rest of the world seem to get by just fine. It's just the same the other way around; if I use the well known dimensions that are used on a daily basis in the metric system the breakdown/conversion doesn't work out so nicely for inches either, but I wouldn't say that inches are useless because I cannot straight convert 5mm (1/2cm) to a nice, even figure in inches. It is not the conversion between two systems that are important, it is the merit of the system itself.
Just as well as you can say half an inch you can say half a cm, half a mm etc... Half a mm (which is the tolerance I normally aim for in general woodworking) is more than adequate for most common woodworking applications.
On his own products he writes;
"The handwheel on the inch models moves the slide .050" per revolution and has 50 graduations of .001". The metric model moves the slide 1mm (.03937") per revolution and the handwheel is graduated into 100 divisions. Even though the metric handwheels have finer graduations, this doesn't necessarily make them more accurate, as you don't have to stop exactly on an engraved line. You can interpolate between lines."
So, is it more accurate, or is it not? Contradictive, at least. It is like he doesn't want to admit to that the graduations ARE finer.
But hey, by no means am I to judge or convert anyone from a system they feel comfortable with, just don't tell me metric doesn't do this and that that Imperial does, there are workarounds, benefits and pitfalls with both systems. And I surely don't mean to step on anybodys toes, or pride. It's just that pride aside I think Imperial is obsolete and by not letting the next generation of americans grow up with metric (or both) will hamper them if they want to go abroad and make a living doing carpentry or other handicrafts as the rest of the world is getting by with metric.
Be stubborn all you likes, I still like you guys, just don't ask the world to embrace a system you are fond of/stuck with and do the youngsters a favor and let them learn both and decide for themselves.
"Did you ever watch a seamstress measure cloth from her nose to her fingertips? That human dimension is normally about 36" or a "yard of cloth". It would take a basketball player with arms over 3" longer to measure meters that way." ??? He uses very vague descriptions to prove a point of Imperial being superior to metric just shows he does not grasp the concept of metric. There are umpteen for the americans unknown similar vague measurements that have been with us from medieval times... ...long before the settlers arrived to America. Here in Sweden we have quite a few that most Swedish people haven't heard of in this generation, I happen to know some of them as I like history.
And saying metric doesn't break down nicely - well I don't know. The tooling industry and carpenters in the rest of the world seem to get by just fine. It's just the same the other way around; if I use the well known dimensions that are used on a daily basis in the metric system the breakdown/conversion doesn't work out so nicely for inches either, but I wouldn't say that inches are useless because I cannot straight convert 5mm (1/2cm) to a nice, even figure in inches. It is not the conversion between two systems that are important, it is the merit of the system itself.
Just as well as you can say half an inch you can say half a cm, half a mm etc... Half a mm (which is the tolerance I normally aim for in general woodworking) is more than adequate for most common woodworking applications.
On his own products he writes;
"The handwheel on the inch models moves the slide .050" per revolution and has 50 graduations of .001". The metric model moves the slide 1mm (.03937") per revolution and the handwheel is graduated into 100 divisions. Even though the metric handwheels have finer graduations, this doesn't necessarily make them more accurate, as you don't have to stop exactly on an engraved line. You can interpolate between lines."
So, is it more accurate, or is it not? Contradictive, at least. It is like he doesn't want to admit to that the graduations ARE finer.
But hey, by no means am I to judge or convert anyone from a system they feel comfortable with, just don't tell me metric doesn't do this and that that Imperial does, there are workarounds, benefits and pitfalls with both systems. And I surely don't mean to step on anybodys toes, or pride. It's just that pride aside I think Imperial is obsolete and by not letting the next generation of americans grow up with metric (or both) will hamper them if they want to go abroad and make a living doing carpentry or other handicrafts as the rest of the world is getting by with metric.
Be stubborn all you likes, I still like you guys, just don't ask the world to embrace a system you are fond of/stuck with and do the youngsters a favor and let them learn both and decide for themselves.
