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I still think kilometres per hour is easier than furlongs per fortnight :)
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Medical use is metric yeah, but those sort of guys usually aren't doing your navigation or picking the right size shell out of the magazine so not really comparable. If your corpsmen are doing those things you have bigger problems than wondering exactly how many km it is to the next Starbucks... Basically I'm going with the old "if it ain't broke don't fix it" standby. (and if people from countries who use metric can't understand it, but our guys can, then that doesn't classify it as "broken" in my book either) ;) |
I hate the mixed up gun measurements.
At one point the UK had different guns in service that measured in: UK inches, USA inches, continental cm, continental mm, UK pounds and continental Kg :doh: |
Aviation in general uses messy mixture of metric and non-metric units. Finnish air force switched from metric to imperial in 2004.
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The US Army uses a lot of metric measurments, due to NATO. The Navy can get away with it as there is little connection between ships in hardware.
The US is one of only three countries that still don't use metric. I don't think the rest of the world will convert to suit America! I know there was a stink in the US when ex-pat Aussies found that shipments of vegiemite were being destroyed at the border, due to the fact they didn't have imperial weights on them! Yet the Carmello Koala's got through despite them only haveing the metric weight on them! |
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-S PS. For ships / aircraft, it will still be a cold day in hell though before they switch. Besides, if all of your enemies are on Metric, it makes it harder to intercept communications accurately! :p |
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I think imperial units are "cool" in a way, and Britain and US will probably fight for them for another 1000 years, but objectively, the metric system is better. There are exceptions however, and one of them is naval and geographic matters. Here nautical miles are better than metric units because they are based on the geoid, i.e. the earth's diameter / 360 degrees / 60 arc minutes = 1 nautical mile (1.8518 km). That means the earth has a diameter of exactly 21600 nm (which can be nicely divided), whereas in kilometers that's an odd 40075. So of course it's much better using nautical miles here than calculating with meters which are a totally arbitrary unit. For instance in 1 hour the earth rotates by exactly 900nm as compared to 1669.7916 km. |
Last option for me. Hopefully never.
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GlobalExplorer, I was specifically saying adding the UTMs on top of the metric system wouldn't simplify anything. The metric system is easy enough on its own, but adding UTMs because you can't use any of your own charts anymore doesn't sound like a simplification but an adding to of training problems.
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