Rick Christopherson said:
Holmz said:
Or our standards for "average person" have dropped.
OK, so do you have a common example where the average person needs to convert volumetric measurements to fluid units in their day to day lives? Is that something that crosses their mind as they are making the morning coffee in their bathrobe? [unsure]
[big grin] [big grin]
The haus-boss was in the garden, and the instructions call for 2-cm of top soil.
So knowing the planter size, does the jepardy definition of ' what is a " stuff load" '
But there is no conversion here. Calculating volume is the same no matter which system you use. You are not converting from volumetric to fluid units. However, if you were thinking of converting your centimeter measurements to a cubic meter equivalent, how many people would actually know that there are 1-million CC's per M3? Without looking it up, how many liters are there in a cubic meter? [big grin]
P.S. Do you think you would do the math correctly if you took your 2cm depth and multiplied it by a garden of 3-meters by 10-meters? You can't change units mid-stream. You've got to stick to one unit, no matter which system you use.
Anything with a car... 2 litre engine at 7200. RPM, what is the CFM?
Ummm, when's the last time the average person needed to know the airflow rate into their engine? [tongue] But yes, absolutely, this is actually the first example that popped into my head because I do engineering designs for the automotive aftermarket industry. But the average vehicle owner never needs to do this.
A cup is ~250ml.
So? You made a conversion, but why did you need to?
Watts =volts * amps
Oops! Watts, volts, and Amps are the same in both systems. But even still, is this something the average person ever needs to calculate? Horsepower to Watts would be a good example, but still, it isn't something the average person needs to do.
Now that we can google it, do people learn it if they need it?
In past people seemed to learned stuff to know it.