Why I will NEVER use the Metric System

  Рет қаралды 3,898,419

Johnny Harris

Johnny Harris

Жыл бұрын

How Americans Missed out on the Metric System
🌏 Exclusive! Grab the NordVPN deal ➼ nordvpn.com/johnnyharris. Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee!
The US decided not to join the rest of the world to go metric. Here’s why.
View my sources here: docs.google.com/document/d/1b...
- ways to support -
My Patreon: / johnnyharris
Our custom Presets & LUTs: store.dftba.com/products/john...
- where to find me -
Instagram: / johnny.harris
Tiktok: / johnny.harris
Facebook: / johnnyharrisvox
Iz's (my wife’s) channel: / iz-harris
- how i make my videos -
Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: tfbeats.com/
I make maps using this AE Plugin: aescripts.com/geolayers/?aff=77
All the gear I use: www.izharris.com/gear-guide
- my courses -
Learn a language: brighttrip.com/course/language/
Visual storytelling: www.brighttrip.com/courses/vi...
- about -
Johnny Harris is a filmmaker and journalist. He currently is based in Washington, DC, reporting on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe. Johnny's visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. He holds a BA in international relations from Brigham Young University and an MA in international peace and conflict resolution from American University.
- press -
NYTimes: www.nytimes.com/2021/11/09/op...
NYTimes: www.nytimes.com/video/opinion...
Vox Borders: • Inside Hong Kong’s cag...
Finding Founders: findingfounders.co/episodes/j...
NPR Planet Money: www.npr.org/transcripts/10721...

Пікірлер: 27 000
@displaychicken
@displaychicken Жыл бұрын
Metric System supporters: “its perfect, it’s logical, it’s easy” Imperial System supporters: “USA! USA! USA!”
@Nekoyama69
@Nekoyama69 Жыл бұрын
Who uses Imperial System besides USA? Liberia and Burma a very exclusive club indeed. :D
@elomial724
@elomial724 Жыл бұрын
@@Nekoyama69 No, when I was in the UK everything was in miles/yards etc. I heard that Canada uses the same measurement so it may apply to Australia and New Zealand and more british colonies
@harmlessbird
@harmlessbird Жыл бұрын
@@elomial724 I can assure you us over here is Australia and New Zealand don't use imperial at all and much prefer metric
@roggonval
@roggonval Жыл бұрын
@@elomial724 i don't know to which england you went because literally everything was in meters
@elomial724
@elomial724 Жыл бұрын
@@harmlessbird Every country uses imperial system to measure a length of screen actually
@hm5142
@hm5142 Жыл бұрын
As a physicist, I shrink in horror from the thought of using imperial units for calculations.
@michawisniewski4654
@michawisniewski4654 Жыл бұрын
well, as electronics designer I am using metric for definition of board dimensions, all calculations, reflow profiles, etc. But when it comes to routing - I am switching to imperial - despite the fact, I am living in Europe. Why? Because basic THT pin grid was 0.1" and that stayed. Of course, today you will find, that most components have their pitch and dimensions defined purely in metric, but majority of PCB fab houses will show you their copper etching capabilities in imperial. So you basically have 90% of PCB dimensions metric, but track widths are in freaking mils. And yes, in theory you can provide metric Gerber files - but when you go for the minimal values permitted by fab - your project may be rejected.
@J.Stank9
@J.Stank9 Жыл бұрын
What's the first thing Americans learn in grade school science classes? Oh right, always use metric for any science. Why are Europeans so mad that Americans prefer to use imperial in their day-to-day life? Because the majority of media content they consume is made by Americans and they're minorly inconvenienced by the use of imperial. Maybe Europeans shouldn't have invented the imperial system
@Crusty_Camper
@Crusty_Camper Жыл бұрын
I agree. Imagine using BTUs and foot/pounds again.
@thierrypauwels
@thierrypauwels Жыл бұрын
Yes. Just like it would be a horror to measure time in days, hours, minutes and seconds, and angles in degrees, minutes and seconds. The conversion to the metric system is not yet finished, even outside the three countries using imperial measurements.
@Crusty_Camper
@Crusty_Camper Жыл бұрын
The second is an SI unit though.
@rolletroll2338
@rolletroll2338 5 ай бұрын
The fact that there is a "debate " just because one country on earth doesn't want to be rational is astounding
@schleich515686
@schleich515686 2 ай бұрын
Aren't we used to that, as that one country is pretty unrational about other things to
@spiritualanarchist8162
@spiritualanarchist8162 2 ай бұрын
A debate that wil remain a debate for now, because the time to implement it has passed. Now everything in the U.S is gets divided. I'm not American, but even I know there would be a part of the population that start ranting against the 'woke leftie metric system' and pro- freedom feet. ;)
@DarkArcangelXMC
@DarkArcangelXMC 2 ай бұрын
I think there are 2 or 3 other countries
@raminolta
@raminolta 2 ай бұрын
You have to keep in mind that specific country happens to rule the world.
@LiopleurodonFerox
@LiopleurodonFerox 2 ай бұрын
@@DarkArcangelXMC Yes, Myanmar and Liberia I think. Others, like those in the Commonwealth, use a mix of metric and imperial. But without wanting to insult Myanmar and Liberia, they do not play as big a role culturally, economically and politically as the US (by far), so I think it's fair to say that only one of the global powers really uses it.
@LucasRodmo
@LucasRodmo 4 ай бұрын
You guys do decimal* with money. Imagine a world where a dime is 12 pennies, a dollar is 23 dimes, 10 dollars is 12.5 unit dollars, etc. See how we see it? Edit: changed metric to decimal
@robertjenkins6132
@robertjenkins6132 Ай бұрын
If metric is so good, then why don't you guys use metric time? 10 seconds in a minute, 10 minutes in an hour, 10 hours in day, 10 days in a month, 10 months in year. Something like that. What about degrees? There are 360 degrees in a revolution. That's not metric. Why not a power of 10? Hint: it has to do with divisibility (the factors that a base has). 10 does not have very many useful factors, only 2 and 5.
@Zolpi1234
@Zolpi1234 Ай бұрын
@@robertjenkins6132 Metric time was almost a thing, it just fell apart because no one wanted 10 day work weeks. Other than that it would be much better.
@stephenspackman5573
@stephenspackman5573 Ай бұрын
@@robertjenkins6132 Er, officially angles are measured in radians. And I'm so glad you explained about factors, it explains pounds and ounces, feet and yards, pints and gallons so well! The metric system isn't perfect, but so long as we are using decimal numbers, it seems like the right engineering compromise.
@unacuentadeyoutube13
@unacuentadeyoutube13 Ай бұрын
​@@robertjenkins6132just think: if metric isn't practical for those applications, imagine how unpractical imperial would be
@Ustamika
@Ustamika Ай бұрын
​@@robertjenkins6132 12 is named the perfect number for a good reason (and 13 break this "perfection" that's why 13 is feared by some ppl) and yes there was 10month 10hours 100min 100 seconds for a time but like you said it wasn't kept cuz 12 is simply the PERFECT number
@sabrac8744
@sabrac8744 Жыл бұрын
Metric > Imperial
@hellopeople1294
@hellopeople1294 Жыл бұрын
I feel like I’m in a war zone
@_laurenolo_
@_laurenolo_ Жыл бұрын
@@engineerenginering8633 how? they're saying Metric is better than Imperial
@monkofdarktimes
@monkofdarktimes Жыл бұрын
Luv mi imperial 'ate mi metric Simple as
@engineerenginering8633
@engineerenginering8633 Жыл бұрын
@@_laurenolo_ it's not
@kenhiett5266
@kenhiett5266 Жыл бұрын
I like that the world's superpower is still stubbornly using the quirky imperial system.
@bad_money
@bad_money Жыл бұрын
Imperial and metric have something in common: They're both incompatible with imperial.
@littlelebowski7714
@littlelebowski7714 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@funkygecko
@funkygecko Жыл бұрын
just joining the ride to top comment
@heya2325
@heya2325 Жыл бұрын
underrated comment
@khidrrr
@khidrrr Жыл бұрын
Took me a few moments 🤣
@winchester289
@winchester289 Жыл бұрын
This should have way more likes 😂
@MrMattie725
@MrMattie725 Ай бұрын
9:30 40.075km is the distance arround the equator. The distances arround the poles is only 40.008km. Which does match the error you mention.
@unacuentadeyoutube13
@unacuentadeyoutube13 Ай бұрын
Short answer: because you're stucked with imperial and never learnt the better alternative from the start
@danieltakawi9919
@danieltakawi9919 11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The way all imperial units are defined now is through the metric system. An inch has no definition other than 2.54 cm.
@centrismo9110
@centrismo9110 11 ай бұрын
25.4 millimeters
@markfinlay6923
@markfinlay6923 11 ай бұрын
One 12th of a foot.
@snarlbanarl1940
@snarlbanarl1940 11 ай бұрын
@@markfinlay6923how do you think a foot is defined?
@Lord_Skeptic
@Lord_Skeptic 11 ай бұрын
3 barleycorns
@louaytheking9989
@louaytheking9989 11 ай бұрын
​@@snarlbanarl1940poof, right into his head😂, he will probably say something'th of a mile..😂😂
@aa-to6ws
@aa-to6ws Жыл бұрын
I love the imperial system in medieval RPG's. It really gives it a sense of immersion into a primitive society where nothing makes sense.
@aetos198
@aetos198 Жыл бұрын
@Tom Beebe lmao, thinking the imperial system was even somewhat equal in usefulness to the metric system, so you feel the need to know both…
@Bazzookie
@Bazzookie Жыл бұрын
@@aetos198 Imagine thinking it even matters, it's simply a way to convey distance and temperature. Arguing over what's better is like trying to argue what language is better, and then saying "English is the best language because that's what everyone is using at the global level." It's all meaningless. We're fucking monkeys on a space rock flying around a burning ball of gas in space, do you think the universe gives a fuck?
@palimondo
@palimondo Жыл бұрын
🔥
@Brigtzen
@Brigtzen Жыл бұрын
@Tom Beebe Imagine not using kelvin to cook noodles
@lianvitos
@lianvitos Жыл бұрын
I used to think that only developing countries would use a imperial system, until I realized there are only three of them
@ZackOfAllTrad3s
@ZackOfAllTrad3s 5 ай бұрын
I hate having to have two different sets of wrenches.
@AlejandroGonzalez-ej4lp
@AlejandroGonzalez-ej4lp Ай бұрын
still better than only imperial
@kjelllindberg6987
@kjelllindberg6987 Ай бұрын
@@AlejandroGonzalez-ej4lp ALL of the US car industry is metric today...
@OswaldMeats
@OswaldMeats Ай бұрын
@@kjelllindberg6987 kinda... I run into all sorts of little things in Customary though, and not even all old ones. You need both.
@boblawson1006
@boblawson1006 14 күн бұрын
Just two? Two? We had SAE (A/F), Whitworth (in two different flavours since, IIRC, the Whitworth and BSF nut/bolt across flat sizes were reduced to save material in WW2. Whitworth / BSF spanners / wrenches were specified by the bolt diameter, so a 1/2" Whitworth spanner opening was considerably larger than 1/2" A/F... Then we had metric, and we had British Association spanners used by electricians, mainly. and then we had different wrench configurations... All part of mechanical life's rich pageant, eh?
@EduardvanKleef
@EduardvanKleef 11 күн бұрын
From time to time, I find it quite useful. E.g. when I need to make a hole just a bit larger than 6mm, I'll use a 1/4" drill bit.
@LucasRodmo
@LucasRodmo 4 ай бұрын
I honestly wanna know how you guys do physics at school. Calculating volumes, distances, speed, etc. Must be torturous.
@AaryanSajwani
@AaryanSajwani 3 ай бұрын
Using the metric system - US schools stop using the imperial system after a certain level
@gizmocat11
@gizmocat11 3 ай бұрын
@@AaryanSajwaniAnything distance is usually calculated in meters. I don’t recall a single problem that used feet or miles in physics class
@gizmocat11
@gizmocat11 3 ай бұрын
Sorry meant to reply to Lucas :p
@LucasRodmo
@LucasRodmo 3 ай бұрын
@@gizmocat11 seems harder to learn two systems.
@TheVortexGaming
@TheVortexGaming 2 ай бұрын
In my high school physics class we had questions in metric and had to answer with imperial or the other way all the time. Everyone knows 1mi=5280ft=12in or “five tomato”, so you just had to learn 1in=2.54cm and then use dimensional analysis as usual. Yeah it’s not multiples of 10 but with calculators it doesn’t matter much.
@bassiebe
@bassiebe Жыл бұрын
There is a reason why all the standard formulas in science are using the metric system… BECAUSE IT MAKES SENSE 🤣
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee Жыл бұрын
In the science of land surveying/engineering we use tenths where the decimal doesn't move. Metric moves decimals.
@bassiebe
@bassiebe Жыл бұрын
@@odnewdylee that is metric…
@Peter-ow6rg
@Peter-ow6rg Жыл бұрын
I mean all maths is made up, it makes Broad sense cause we have 10 digits in total on both hand and makes using a base 10 system more familiar as when we grow up, fingers are good for learning aids
@Feefa99
@Feefa99 Жыл бұрын
I work in international logistics and constant change of systems really doesn't make job easier with hundreds of currencies and languages and hundreds of thousands of kind of goods. Yes metrics system makes sense, because people are able to do mistakes because of overly complicated systemic issues (I mean not just measurement 😀)
@odnewdylee
@odnewdylee Жыл бұрын
@@bassiebe until using cm, then the decimal is in the wrong place. It becomes it's own entity not like tenths. Tenths are always behind the decimal so when using blueprints you don't have to check any signs after the number.
@kre4ture218
@kre4ture218 Жыл бұрын
I love how this discussion comes up again and again even though one system is objectively and utterly superior
@noelmasson
@noelmasson Жыл бұрын
Superior? How exactly? Objectively and utterly?
@hyrulehollowtitan9657
@hyrulehollowtitan9657 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the imperial system is based on random things, while the metric is very consistent within, works with the most standard physics models, its overall logical
@WhiteShadowZO
@WhiteShadowZO Жыл бұрын
The metrics system is also based on random things. "Earth" and "water" are no more objective than body parts or pieces of corn. And as explained, even measurements based on the human body can be standardized. And they can also be used to calculate physical phenomenon. The imperial system is very good for human style living and human sized things.
@eliterager9241
@eliterager9241 Жыл бұрын
@@WhiteShadowZO Actually it is not, the metric system is a universal system of measurement, as it has been proven that a meter is the inverse of the speed of light in a vacuum. Which is given a fixed numerical value of 299,792,458 m/s, so a meter can be defined as the distance covered by light in a vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second.
@andrewmatthews8428
@andrewmatthews8428 Жыл бұрын
Yea metric really is superior 🦅🇺🇸🥓🍳
@secondphoenix7676
@secondphoenix7676 4 ай бұрын
Better title: Why I prefer to remain dumb
@carlosfeldman8687
@carlosfeldman8687 Ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@lysin
@lysin 2 күн бұрын
You should better watch the whole video...
@uudta-panchii
@uudta-panchii 20 сағат бұрын
i did and yes this is definitely an alternative title​@@lysin
@annoholics
@annoholics Ай бұрын
So what do they use in the US for electricity? We use for power the Watt. 1 Watt is a Joule per second. A joule is the amount of energy that is needed to change the speed of 1 kg with 1 meter / s^2. If you buy a lightbulb in the US, is it still measured in horse power? Or what else do they use?
@andrewinat434
@andrewinat434 21 күн бұрын
Horsepower for electricity ? That's sound dumb 😅
@danielklopp7007
@danielklopp7007 21 күн бұрын
@@andrewinat434 - Are you referring to American horsepower (1 hp = 745.7 watts) or German horsepower ( 1 ps = 735.5 watts)? In Germany engine power is sometimes quoted in "ps" (literally translated as "horsepower"), and in the United States engine power is quoted in "hp", but the two units are not the same (even though they go by the same name in their respective languages - similar to the difference between a British pint and an American pint)... pointing out one of the difficulties of any measurement system other than metric. Ironically, the USA typically uses the metric unit of power (watts) to measure electrical power, but the Imperial unit of power (horsepower) to measure (piston, internal combustion) engine power.
@Okurka.
@Okurka. 15 күн бұрын
BTU
@danielklopp7007
@danielklopp7007 14 күн бұрын
@@Okurka. - BTU (British Thermal Unit) is a measure of energy, not power. The SI unit of energy is the Joule. The SI unit of power is the Watt
@Okurka.
@Okurka. 14 күн бұрын
@@danielklopp7007 Woosh.
@elpana3752
@elpana3752 Жыл бұрын
As a foreigner that moved to America I’ve found their measurement system just plain crazy, thank goodness for the internet and my phone.
@strangebeard11
@strangebeard11 Жыл бұрын
Here in the UK we have a ridiculous mash up of both systems. And most people still give their height and weight in imperial even now.
@hekter2364
@hekter2364 Жыл бұрын
Like how many football fields crazy?
@shirokisasaki3233
@shirokisasaki3233 Жыл бұрын
right
@jiyoo6109
@jiyoo6109 Жыл бұрын
its not crazy..its stupid
@trukeesey8715
@trukeesey8715 Жыл бұрын
It's not crazy. It's natural. Metric is "of the mind" not "of nature". Anything of the mind is evil, of nature good. Just the fact that you wrote "foreigner" tells the tale. Metric is foreign.
@alexanderlangley
@alexanderlangley 10 ай бұрын
The metric system: literally every unit is just 10x , 100x or 1000x the sum of the last. Americans: This is too complicated to me.
@BoogieManSince1977
@BoogieManSince1977 10 ай бұрын
hahahaha so many "Yards/Feet/Poles/What-the-f**k-ever" of this. Logic... apparently not for everyone :P
@MatthewHill
@MatthewHill 10 ай бұрын
Yeah but powers of 2 are much easier in actual use than powers of ten. Look at a distance--easy to mentally cut it in half, quarters, eights, etc. Units that are 10x from each other just aren't that convenient. But at the end of the day, it doesn't matter--as long as it's standardized. Pick a system that works for you and stop being a snob about it.4
@grosnain
@grosnain 10 ай бұрын
they even don't know where america is !
@gfixler
@gfixler 10 ай бұрын
But 10 isn't useful for me. I do woodworking. Halves and doubles in feet and inches is far more useful. I got all excited in college when I found precision decimal inch rulers, because I could finally work in decimal, which sounded amazing, but still work at my familiar scale, and fit standard spaces and objects in the US. I struggled with it for a year or two, before ditching it entirely. It sucked, constantly. I don't convert between things like lengths and liquid volumes, so ×10 and ÷10 is it's only trick, which I never found useful. With a foot I can divide a box into 1 12" space, 2 6" spaces, 3 4" spaces, 4 3" spaces, 6 2" spaces, or 12 1" spaces, all of which are really great, human-scale sizes. A cm is so small, it's never useful on its own, and everywhere I look I find things are some crazy number of mm, like 17.3mm x 29.7mm. All the standards are crazy, too, like plywood is 1200x2400mm (13 syllables), whereas mine is 4x8ft (4 syllables). All our stuff is 1x2, 2x4, 4x4, 2x8, etc - super small and simple. European cabinetry uses a lot of roughly 5x5ft panels, but there it's 1525x1525mm. In the US, ceilings tend to be 8 (I can almost touch), 9 (can almost jump to touch), or 10 ft (can't reach). In the UK they're 2.4m or 2.6m, complicated from the start. All the numbers are a lot more wacky to me. We have 2x4s. They have 100x47mm (I found a number of different things, but most weren't nice, simple, memorable things). I've heard other countries use these wacky mm sizes, but often still call them things like 2x4s, because of how nice that is. We do a ton of timber framing the US, so all of these numbers are small, simple, and work out great. The UK does a ton of brick and block building. The office I'm in right now is 10x12x9, super easy to figure out things like how much paint I need for the walls, or how much wood I need for the flooring. I just looked up standard UK office spaces, and right away found a page that said "In a typical room, where the ceiling is 2.4m high, a floor area of 4.6m2 (for example 2.0 x 2.3m) will be needed to provide a space of 11 cubic metres. Where the ceiling is 3.0m high or higher the minimum floor area will be 3.7m2 (for example 2.0 x 1.85m). It's all a bunch of hard to remember decimals, and that seems standard. I've investigated this many times over the years, and everything ends up a wash of thick decimal numbers. All the rooms in all the houses I've lived in have been simple, whole number feet measurements - 10x10, 15x20, 10x12. I could remember the whole house when I was at the home store, because feet are a much more usable scale than centimeters or meters, and so we build to them most of the time. I also find mm to be just too tiny. It's like having to work in 32nds of an inch all the time. At my age I can't even easily see them anymore. The next thing up, cm, are still so small I need a ton of them to do anything. Up from there, we blow past desktop scale stuff, and we're in m, but even that doesn't match up with anything, like the height of a human, or a room. Everything is off, and non-ergonomic. I could go on and on. Imperial may not be great for science, and conversions between entirely different types of units - totally agree - but it is a really nice system for things like woodworking, and even CNC machining (I have an imperial CNC mill and lathe). Now, of course, everything's trade-offs, so I will say that I looked into it before, and found stud (joist? rafter? I forget now) spacing in metric being done at 60cm, which is very nearly 24"/2', but is wonderfully divisible by almost everything - 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30, 60. I have to admit that's pretty cool.
@Rithmy
@Rithmy 10 ай бұрын
@@gfixler If you grow up in metric system then some or many of your points never happen. You still feel and think in the imperial system, but try to use the metric system. That does not work. Just like me using the imprial system. I find it easy to work with those hard to remember decimals, but i guess its a point you have there with those multiplications. I know how tall i am and how far i can reach. 2.4m is not complicated for me at all. I rougthly know what a cm is. I know where to find proportions on my hands that are 10cm or 20 cm. Very usefull. I know how to make a step that is 1 m long.
@CH-sr1js
@CH-sr1js 11 күн бұрын
Once you use it, it’s easy. In medicine we only use metric. Now I have an easier time using milliliters and liters for liquid volume instead of cups, pints, quarts, and gallons. The same goes for temperature as well
@kennamorrison8564
@kennamorrison8564 Ай бұрын
OK, I'm a 69 year old Australian and was around 18 or 19 when Australia mostly swithched to the metiric system. It took a while, but with the help of all publically available data being presenting in metric measurements I became bi-measured (?) fairly quickly. Schools also made the conversion. The metiric system is cleaerly better and my, now adult, kids will take a second or two to work out what an imperial measurment means in propper measurment, only due to the amount of US media we consume. The only really stubborn hold-out for me, and many others, is pressure: I still pump my tires to 36psi, and I think that my kids do as well. I reckon that my grandkids may finally pump their tires to 2.5 bar. (32psi is 2.2bar) I'm not good at dividing PSI by about 14.5! While remembering that 30cm is rougly a foot and a metre is close to a one (actually 1.1) yards is pretty easy. I've fully converted speed from mph to km/h though: those speed signs and speedos (without mph) are everywhere!
@JazzGuitar-qs1td
@JazzGuitar-qs1td Жыл бұрын
Q. What is 1 x 10? A. 10 Congratulations, you just mastered the metric system.
@fransthefox9682
@fransthefox9682 Жыл бұрын
Americans will never figure that out.
@TheMapGod275
@TheMapGod275 Жыл бұрын
@@fransthefox9682a lot of Americans. I’m American and I can… READ!!! Can you believe it!!! I’m an AMERICAN that can READ and do MATH(s). I’m like a genius or something, right?
@fransthefox9682
@fransthefox9682 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMapGod275 Ah okay. Then you must know the Metric system even more than the Imperial system.
@darrellbeets7758
@darrellbeets7758 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMapGod275 i bet u still use imperial... for us who never use imperial using it seems stupid..aka even if u only use it once every while.....stupid.
@Nikioko
@Nikioko Жыл бұрын
That's the decimal system... And the US have that as well when it comes to 100 cents in a dollar.
@dratsi7038
@dratsi7038 4 ай бұрын
Do you realise that every imperial unit in the USA is defined using Metric units.
@sameeramachinchery2208
@sameeramachinchery2208 13 күн бұрын
You clearly didn’t watch the video. He didn’t say he finds the imperial system better, he just stated how he cannot change. 🤦‍♂️
@KWally
@KWally 11 күн бұрын
​@@sameeramachinchery2208yes, but in a weird way by using imperial you're using metric....
@xenobarbital
@xenobarbital 12 күн бұрын
I've been using metric my entire life. I was aware about existence of all those inches, feet and pounds, but those meant as much for me as something like old Roman league. Then I got more proficient with English and I started reading British and American literature. That made me memorize some conversion coefficients to roughly recalculate all those into metric. And believe it or not, I got there. Well, kind of. A mile? About 1.6 km (1609). A nautical mile? About 1.8 km. A pound? Slightly less than half a kilogram (0.454). And inch? 2.5(ish) cm. Then I got into woodworking and started watching all those youtube videos, mostly by American and British craftsmen. Vast majority of them use inches. And when they go "oh, this is 3/16 of an inch, that one is 5/6, the other one is 3/4 etc, etc, etc. This is when my neural system shuts down. I freaking hate this. Metric is orders of magnitude more convenient. All you have to care about is decimal fractions. That's it. Sorry (not really).
@timothysands5537
@timothysands5537 Жыл бұрын
As a mechanical engineering student in America, I can firmly claim that myself and all students in my major beg on their hands and knees for metric based problems and never imperial unit based ones.
@themoss7115
@themoss7115 Жыл бұрын
Because it is built as an actual system and it works with decimal numbers. Imperial "system" is just random pile of ad-hoc measurement units added on top of each other over centuries when someone needed to measure something new. It's somewhat useful for day to day life, but it is incompatible with modern math.
@user-pn4py6vr4n
@user-pn4py6vr4n Жыл бұрын
As an engineering student in Australia, if I get a problem with imperial units, I convert to metric as the first step, because engineering, and indeed any endeavour that requires any degree of precision, should not be done with imperial under any circumstances.
@Labyrinth6000
@Labyrinth6000 Жыл бұрын
Yeah because it’s by design by the government to give up the imperial system just to “get in line” with the rest of the world.
@Tridd666
@Tridd666 Жыл бұрын
Why?
@gomerzpyle6805
@gomerzpyle6805 Жыл бұрын
You're on the wrong board for that. That's a matter of another discussion hence the term mechanical engineer. When you step outside to see if you need a jacket or not you don't get surveying equipment. If you get in your car to grab something to eat and need to go by the gas station they don't break your tank down into cc's. That would be for Ju Mcduck. We're not paying in Shekels. For measuring your Johnson I'm sure metric is a little more flattering.
@Przybylski713
@Przybylski713 Жыл бұрын
Metric system is superior!
@Heckerschee
@Heckerschee Жыл бұрын
Obviously
@Cowatude
@Cowatude Жыл бұрын
Metric gang 📏
@WhoeverThisManIs20.14
@WhoeverThisManIs20.14 Жыл бұрын
@UCKW5MtM_bgUIfQLT6eIFq-g You're the one who is wrong.
@thomassmith7884
@thomassmith7884 Жыл бұрын
Chill out nerds
@HaybaleMelon
@HaybaleMelon Жыл бұрын
Woooo metric
@HCkev
@HCkev 6 күн бұрын
"I will never use the metric system!" Drug dealers: "So how many grams do you want?"
@shmu_el
@shmu_el 5 ай бұрын
In the US the nutritional information is in metric?!? This explains the obesity rates
@jsveiga
@jsveiga Жыл бұрын
Hey, as a metric person and engineer, I feel the urge to point out that the official SI abbreviations are case sensitive, so for example from 21:15 on you use "M" instead of "m" for meters, then "KM" instead of "km" (but correctly use "cm", why?). Case is very important, as you don't want to confuse MW (megawatt) with mW (milliwatt) or PV (petavolt) with pV (picovolt)!
@texanplayer7651
@texanplayer7651 Жыл бұрын
Imagine running a train with mW but charging your phone with MW
@IncDoge
@IncDoge Жыл бұрын
One metric person to another... just give up, they wont ever get it. And i doubt they want to get it cus the f in feet and farenheight stands for FREEDOM
@victoriasoto1017
@victoriasoto1017 Жыл бұрын
@@IncDoge 'Murica - the place where they believe they are ultra-free but they are totally not.
@Shoomer1988
@Shoomer1988 Жыл бұрын
@@texanplayer7651 I imagine that you wouldn't be able to call a taxi because the train isn't working because your phone just caught fire.
@otakugamer616
@otakugamer616 Жыл бұрын
I never knew these awesome thanks for Donation of some knowledge to me
@DPSCRIVO
@DPSCRIVO Жыл бұрын
I studied Physics at Uni in the UK. Occasionally they'd use Imperial and get us to convert them just to show how bat shit crazy the system is. Christ, having to account for minutes, seconds and hours was painful enough
@dsp4392
@dsp4392 11 ай бұрын
Time is a whole nother can of worm. Ask any software developer. Our current system is an absolute mess, and we've barely started tackling time in space and the relativistic effects. At least most of the world is on the same page and using the same system.
@stargazer7644
@stargazer7644 11 ай бұрын
@@dsp4392 Time is fairly easy (leap seconds not withstanding), but dealing with the calendar in software is a right PITA.
@81formann
@81formann 11 ай бұрын
@@dsp4392 Not just software. Im in hardware as well, and when I started working with IMU and GNSS data I was shocked to see how hard it would be to get accurate data when sampling at up to 2KHz and moving at 200++km/t.
@Nukepositive
@Nukepositive 11 ай бұрын
In the US, studying engineering, unit conversion was basically the only thing we did for a whole semester. Metric, Imperial, and even other weird shit - it didn't matter. It was drilled in us how to do unit conversion. To this day, I can still caclulate how many smoots to the beard-second by hand or whatever units there are. It's a skill engineers should know, even if they stay in SI. That being said, imperial needs to die and metric is the best.
@Lord_Skeptic
@Lord_Skeptic 11 ай бұрын
We British do use a hybrid. We are not getting rid of the British pint. That is British culture.
@Lord_Skeptic
@Lord_Skeptic 9 күн бұрын
9:37 that is at the equator. At the poles it is just under 40008KM.
@texasranger24
@texasranger24 Ай бұрын
In metric, one milliliter of water occupies one cubic centimeter, weighs one gram, and requires one calorie of energy to heat up by one degree centigrade-which is 1 percent of the difference between its freezing point and its boiling point. An amount of hydrogen weighing the same amount has exactly one mole of atoms in it. Whereas in the American system, the answer to ‘How much energy does it take to boil a room-temperature gallon of water?’ is ‘Go fuck yourself,’ because you can’t directly relate any of those quantities.
@miked.9364
@miked.9364 Ай бұрын
Not true.
@gibbel4619
@gibbel4619 Ай бұрын
Except that a calorie isn't a SI unit. You would have to say it take about 4.2 J to heat up the water by 1°C (the engineer in me also screams that properties such a density and heat capacity are temperature dependant). But then °C isn't an SI unit either, though pragmatically Kelvin was defined using °C as a basis.
@sidorgeorge
@sidorgeorge 22 күн бұрын
Except that the average America wouldn't give one flying f*ck about how much energy it takes to boil a room temperature gallon of water. They just turn on the gas stove, and not worry about things like that which are in the egghead domain.
@NTelling
@NTelling 11 күн бұрын
@@sidorgeorge Nice work giving an example of how measurements don't matter when doing a task that requires no measurements.
@ElwoodEBlues
@ElwoodEBlues 7 күн бұрын
@@gibbel4619 The calorie is in fact the basis for the kg TNT equivalent: 1 calorie = 4.184 J 1kg TNT equiv. = 4.184 MJ (by definition, simply burning TNT releases less energy per kg) 1 Megaton = 1,000,000 X 1,000 kg X 4.184 MJ = 4.184 PJ (petajoules) Imagine that energy released within about 600 ns (nanoseconds) when the bomb goes off ... or when it's 56 MT as the device had the Russians have tested in '61 (Tsar Bomba)
@AndrewHewing
@AndrewHewing 8 ай бұрын
I am 77 years of age and I grew up using the imperial system. I can add fractions in my head. However when making furniture I quickly recognized that imperial is (practically) just not accurate enough! And so I changed to Metric. Working to a millimetre is easier (and more accurate) than working to 1/16th inch! Once you get used to metric you will never want to go back!
@garyholt8315
@garyholt8315 7 ай бұрын
discovered the same thing !
@rameynoodles152
@rameynoodles152 7 ай бұрын
What I don't understand, is why things were divided like on a binary system in powers of 2?? I mean, imagine if the foot was not divided into 4ths, 8th, 16ths and 32nds, but instead divided into tenths, hundredths, and thousandths just like metric? Issue gone. Poof. And what if we just picked one single unit for each type of measurment, and just multiplied or divided by 10, 100, 1000, etc? Like, ok, you got meters, grams, and liters, we got yards, ounces, and gallons. Now instead of kilometers, centimeters, kilograms, milligrams etc we got kiloyards, centiyards, kiloounces, milliounces, kilogallons, etc... Boom, issue solved again. The thing I like about imperial is that many of the base units of measure are good representations for what they are commonly used for. Feet is good because you can approximate a distance with literal feet, so it fits nicely for the application. Fahrenheit is particularly good for weather because instead of being based on boiling point of water, it's based on the average temperature of the human body, and it allows for nice round numbers for particular air temperatures that feel noticably different. For instance, most people like their room temperature to be 68, 69, 70, 71, or 72 degrees fahrenheit. This corresponds to 20c, 20.555c, 21.111c, 21.666c, and 22.222c. If you wanted to give whole numbers for room temp in celcius, each whole digit would go up by nearly 2 degrees fahrenheit, which is too large of a jump, so you are forced to use decimal places to describe your ideal room temp.
@russelbiffs3683
@russelbiffs3683 7 ай бұрын
@@rameynoodles152 this is a lame excuse. I have no problem describing 20.5 C, 21C, 21.5C and so on for my room temperature. My A/C control shift temperature in 0.5C steps. In fact, comparing to distance, using 0.5 increments in temperature is easier than describing a size of wrench socket a 7/16" or 1-1/8". Describing like that it is very ackward compared to the closest metric equivalents (M16 or M29).
@NoBodysGamer
@NoBodysGamer 7 ай бұрын
@@rameynoodles152 I dont know, using Celcious is easy and logical, 0 is freezing water, 100 is boiling and means dont shove your fingers, average human body temp is 36, i use AC set to 25C The differences in your example are not feelable one degree celcious is nothing, plus one minus one you wont really feel it
@rameynoodles152
@rameynoodles152 7 ай бұрын
@@NoBodysGamer Man, i gotta say.. A/C set to 25C is REALLY HOT.
@AlexC-jz7qz
@AlexC-jz7qz 9 ай бұрын
As a pilot I can say the imperial system is making everyone's lives more difficult in the industry.
@EvoraGT430
@EvoraGT430 9 ай бұрын
As a pilot I can say that's a crock.
@DudeManBoroMan
@DudeManBoroMan 9 ай бұрын
as a pilot im thankful imperial is standard, as a maker i’m not so thankful for imperial
@rogerphelps9939
@rogerphelps9939 8 ай бұрын
Only for altitude.@@DudeManBoroMan
@XdekHckr
@XdekHckr 8 ай бұрын
maker of what? wdym@@DudeManBoroMan
@patakanz
@patakanz 8 ай бұрын
Aviation doesn't use any one system. It's a mixture of imperial (altitude), nautical (distance/speed) and in most cases, metric (visibility, air pressure, temperature, dewpoint). Personally I'm glad they don't use metric for altitude or speed/distance. "When ready, descend to one thousand two hundred metres" or "reduce speed to three three three kilometres per hour" (as opposed to "descend to four thousand feet" and "reduce speed to to one eight zero knots" is much quicker to say on the radio. There's also the fact that ATC 'units' are in blocks of 5 miles lateral and 1000 feet vertical, so to switch to the metric system makes all that a lot harder for those who separate aircraft from each other.
@BlackHawkAttackHelicopter
@BlackHawkAttackHelicopter 3 ай бұрын
Essentially, Imperial is better as long as you’re not doing anything important.
@sauliaalto2835
@sauliaalto2835 22 күн бұрын
Exactly what my thought was, a (wet american) gallon for example sounds like an irregular tin bucket for milking cows or something but if you convert it to real measurement units which is (about) 3,78541 liters that's when it makes sense - Okay, almost four liters then, cheers!
@DamirUlovec
@DamirUlovec 12 күн бұрын
This statement sounds very logical for me (non-imperial guy)! If I do something at home, and don't have a meter with me, bare imperial measurement WILL do the job, you're right.
@xxrgxxcasco
@xxrgxxcasco Ай бұрын
count chicken heads, add chicken legs and divide by 3. Congratulations, you just counted chickens imperial style.
@grantnitschke9794
@grantnitschke9794 11 ай бұрын
As an Australian Boomer, I grew up with the British Imperial Measurement System. However. during my twenties, we switched over to the metric system completely. It wasn't long before most of us were thinking in metric, although some of us (me included) occasionally think about something in Imperial. So I think anyone who claims to not be able to change is simply in denial and is using the "inability" as a madeup cop-out excuse.
@PercussiveMaintenance
@PercussiveMaintenance 11 ай бұрын
Well said!! They made up excuses during the industrialisation and they continue to do so in 2023. But any job of real world application or significance(research, medicine, engineering etc) has silently moved on to the metric system for obvious reasons but the general public are stuck with an outdated system thanks to the educational inadequacies and inaction by the government. It probably explains the obesity crisis in America as all nutritional information on packages is in the metric system but no one even understands what it means!
@JuanFranciscoGuarracino
@JuanFranciscoGuarracino 11 ай бұрын
it is funny (lame, actually) how Australians use the metric system for everything except their own height. they are like "this tree in 3 m tall" "and how tall are you?" "six feet"
@joachimmika1087
@joachimmika1087 11 ай бұрын
Me too. What's ironic is that when my parents migrated to Australia from Germany in 1960, my father, who was a carpenter, had to learn the imperial measurement system ... only to have to convert back in the 70's when we went metric!
@zibbut
@zibbut 11 ай бұрын
Exactly what i was thinking. It's all fun and games with ft and inches. Until you need to split a fraction of an inch in half. or know what 1" 25/64ths means. The whole excuse of "i can't relate" turns right around when you get into the fractions. bad habits die hard.
@orti1283
@orti1283 11 ай бұрын
There you have it, switched completely. All your surroundings were metric, while in the US they're not and probably won't be for a long long time.
@F3nya
@F3nya Жыл бұрын
I always found it funny how during my school years (in Estonia) we used rules that always had centimeters on one side and inches on the other and I never knew what those inches are on the other side, no one used them anywhere, but they were still there.
@NeoDerGrose
@NeoDerGrose Жыл бұрын
Same here in Germany.
@tor4472
@tor4472 Жыл бұрын
That's what it was like in the U.S. except we only used inches and didn't really know what the centimeters meant!
@bernardobila4336
@bernardobila4336 Жыл бұрын
Same here in Mozambique
@土曜日
@土曜日 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Estonia too, very familiar for me
@cosmicnights
@cosmicnights Жыл бұрын
Same in Australia.
@valentin60150
@valentin60150 5 ай бұрын
As a French I want to offer you a standard meter piece of wood, the whole world was able to adopt it but the N°1 superpower is unable I wanna say "c'mon bro that's because you don't want it."
@waimoana2648
@waimoana2648 Ай бұрын
one of the minor ironies of this debate is that Americans use a decimal currency but proceed to divide it into non-decimal quarters.
@sidorgeorge
@sidorgeorge 22 күн бұрын
A quarter is a naturally intuitive thing people understand. We don't naturally understand a tenth of something. A tenth is small. A quarter is easier to picture. And a quarter is simply 25/100, 25 hundredths. That very decimal like.
@Okurka.
@Okurka. 15 күн бұрын
@@sidorgeorge Count your fingers.
@fitzstv8506
@fitzstv8506 10 күн бұрын
@@sidorgeorgeA quarter of something feeling naturally intuitive is just conditioning. Understanding a tenth of something also requires conditioning. Like 'Okurka' says count your fingers.
@ShamaxGD
@ShamaxGD 2 күн бұрын
@@sidorgeorge well, I do naturally understand 1/10, its easy to imagine a building height, 1/10 of mass etc. Although, quarter is definitely way easier to comprehend
@dirtyfeetadventures9672
@dirtyfeetadventures9672 Жыл бұрын
As an engineer, we use the metric system although while in college we were exposed to problems with imperial units so we had to memorize frequently used conversion values. In practice, it's metric system all the way, I cant imagine doing it in imperial. I still encounter imperial in daily life so had to be flexible and tolerant somehow.
@FinnMcRiangabra
@FinnMcRiangabra Жыл бұрын
Agreed. As soon as I see some Fred Flintstone units like BTU or ft, I heave a sigh and convert to usable units. Oddly, I am stuck with KSI (thousands of pounds [force] per square inch) for most material strengths. Oh, and that lie that your engineering professors told you about the pound being a US customary unit of force, not a mass is a lie (and nonsense about slugs). Since the early 1970's the U.S. pound has been defined with respect to the international kilogram, which is a mass.
@jpcaretta8847
@jpcaretta8847 Жыл бұрын
Carter who was an engineer but a bad politicians pushed fir metrication. Idiots who followed stopped to please lazy idiots. Confusion also help stores as customers cant figure out and compare prices per quantity !
@Adroit1911
@Adroit1911 Жыл бұрын
So you're not a Ford engineer then?
@normanstewart7130
@normanstewart7130 Жыл бұрын
You're in the US?
@normanstewart7130
@normanstewart7130 Жыл бұрын
@@FinnMcRiangabra You didn't mention poundals!
@AlanKlughammer
@AlanKlughammer 11 ай бұрын
I remember when Canada switched to Metric. It was confusing for a bit, and we had to convert things in our heads. Now I have no idea how the US-ian measurement system works. Now when I travel to the States I have to convert to metric for it to make sense.
@kjay8796
@kjay8796 10 ай бұрын
In Canada the extent of our metric use is km for speed limits and Celsius for temperature. Everything else here is still imperial. We aren’t a metric country.
@JfjsnxjfndiKcbjdksm
@JfjsnxjfndiKcbjdksm 10 ай бұрын
​@@kjay8796 km/h, km is for length ahah
@WilliamAndrea
@WilliamAndrea 10 ай бұрын
@@kjay8796 I feel like you're forgetting a lot of things. Like yeah we measure people's height in feet and inches, and weight in pounds, but food is all in metric like 2L soda bottles, or at least it's labeled as such even when it's not actually measured in it, like 473ml beer cans (16 fl oz). Also in the weather, snowfall is measured in cm and rain in mm. Also on the road, height limits are in metres and weight limits in metric tonnes.
@louistournas120
@louistournas120 10 ай бұрын
@@WilliamAndrea Canada, Quebec. For people’s height, it seems to be mixes. Some people use inches and some use cm. When I visit various doctors, they only use cm. For road length and speed, it is pretty rare to hear miles and feet. For weather reports, they only use mm, cm for rain and snow depth. They only use Celsius. They only use km for visibility. They only use Pascal or kPa for pressure. For TV and monitor size, everyone uses inches since that is what the box says in large letter. It is USA related. For supermarkets and such, pounds are prioritized for some reason. They mostly print out $/kg as well. It is mostly in the construction industry where imperial units are always used. If I want to buy drill bits, they give fractional numbers like 3/8 of an inch.... and they lost me. I have no idea what 3/8 or 1/4 and such means. Why don’t they give exact numbers? Hey, what time is it? It is 345/1735 hour and 731/3895 minutes.
@Migeru70
@Migeru70 10 ай бұрын
Go and try to buy 1/4 of kilo of anything at the market, they will scratch their heads and say: "oh, a half-pound!"
@user-hy8tn8ne9j
@user-hy8tn8ne9j 5 ай бұрын
21:22 If you take as a reference for 1 meter the ruler, a long piece of metal or wood that you are using for measurements, it is obviously hard to estimate distances in meters... However, when you realize that any medium-large step when you walk is about 1 meter long, it becomes much more comfortable and easy to use !
@hernanweber3896
@hernanweber3896 Ай бұрын
But extremely innacurate.. for daily life could be more confortable... but for things like calculate salaries and payments based on distance traveled as my case metric is waaay more efficient
@BrightBlueJim
@BrightBlueJim Ай бұрын
@@hernanweber3896 How on Earth is it more efficient? Unless you just happen to travel some exact multiple of km, you still have to do a calculation, and then there is no difference, because you still work it out to the same number of decimal points.
@hernanweber3896
@hernanweber3896 Ай бұрын
@@BrightBlueJim no, working with km is easier to round it up, Lets say i must do a travél to the central ive got exactly 178,1km at 8.15usdxkm traveled. Now on miles it will be 110.662093374 miles at 5.06417521xmile
@oldmankell
@oldmankell Жыл бұрын
Whenever I see a title like that, my first thought is- "Is base 10 just too hard for you to figure out?" I'm an American, trained and worked as an American Mechanic. I moved to Europe. The metric system makes MY life easier in so many ways.
@ilsgrade8357
@ilsgrade8357 Жыл бұрын
It's not that it's hard. From my experience, it's just useless stubbornness and a weird sense of national pride.
@cdgncgn
@cdgncgn Жыл бұрын
@@ilsgrade8357 exceptionalism :)
@Middlestepofficial
@Middlestepofficial Жыл бұрын
We should all remember that Sumerians used a sexagesimal system back in 4000 BC, which is Base-60 and far from 10! They designed the 60-minute hour ffs... We still use the base 60 numbering for designing navigaton systems.
@porky1118
@porky1118 Жыл бұрын
It's not difficult to use base 10 (decimal). It's just stupid to use base 10 (decimal). We should use base 10 instead.
@dufinsmrts
@dufinsmrts Жыл бұрын
Also the problem is how they said " everything will be made in metric" they said that when my dad was a kid
@Owlzz_
@Owlzz_ 5 ай бұрын
Fun fact, nowadays imperial unit are based from metric Edit : even in america
@anthonybrowne8863
@anthonybrowne8863 Жыл бұрын
I was in high school in Australia when the whole country switched to metric. The text books were imperial one year and metric the next. The thing is they took the same text and changed the measurements. The technical drawing books would say draw a square 52 mm by 52 mm. Every thing I read had conversion factors built in. I was constantly doing conversions for my dad. (Not my mum, she was a pharmacist and was already across the whole metric system). After a while my dad got used to it too, it wasn't that hard.
@reezlaw
@reezlaw Жыл бұрын
Probably the only way to do it is the whole country in one big bang
@Majormockery151
@Majormockery151 Жыл бұрын
yeah, the key is schooling.
@ApoJake13
@ApoJake13 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, as an American, I don't disagree that it wouldn't be that hard - in the long run. It would just be one hell of a speed bump to get over. I personally think we should convert to metric, but until it becomes officially sanctioned by the government, I agree with Johnny in that it is impossible for me to comprehend and retain it. It's basically like learning a second language. You can learn that language and even be fluent in it, but if you don't use it in everyday life, you will just revert back to what you know and are comfortable with.
@Minifliek
@Minifliek Жыл бұрын
You underestimate how stubborn Americans are.
@mirjamleeflang7482
@mirjamleeflang7482 Жыл бұрын
It's really true that you learn this because your environment adjusted to it. In my country there are little green signs next to the road spread 100 m apart. The signs are there to tell you the exact location if you were to be stranded there (amongst other things). But it helped me to understand what a distance of 100 m looks like subconsciously. Just a small example.
@Matpatnik-inc
@Matpatnik-inc 10 ай бұрын
I'm Canadian machinist working in the wood industry. I have to convert and switch from one unit to the other every day because the wood we buy and construction site use the old US imperial system and everything else in metric. The imperial measurement is a nightmare when you need to work with decimal.
@vukasinristanovic5940
@vukasinristanovic5940 9 ай бұрын
ouch , I feel you
@johnbuie9195
@johnbuie9195 9 ай бұрын
Welcome to the UK. 😂
@timtomnec
@timtomnec 9 ай бұрын
BRo decimals are simple, come back when you do fractions for 7/16 and 15/32
@Matpatnik-inc
@Matpatnik-inc 9 ай бұрын
@@timtomnec I think you are missing the point here. Only working with decimal, of course it's easy but converting the fraction back and forth its is where the pain begin especially in the 32th of an inch and smaller.
@Matpatnik-inc
@Matpatnik-inc 9 ай бұрын
@soyel94 welcome the the wood industry in Quebec, I don't know about the other province. I guess we like it rough lol
@vladstankovic1050
@vladstankovic1050 25 күн бұрын
Imperial units are intuitive, like - Galon equals to three mouse sneezes in quirkles. Also, everyone knows to simply measure roughly one and a quarter cockroaches when cutting boards to width for example.
@doug-says
@doug-says 3 ай бұрын
195 countries in the world 3 use imperial, USA, Myanmar, and Liberia. Everyone else has come to realize that changing to something better is problematic at first, but better in the long run. Why are we even having a discussion about what 7% of the world population say is better when 93% of us realize that the US should step into the 90's and accept that metric is better.
@Saffy1
@Saffy1 Жыл бұрын
I decided to teach my kid both systems. It was really hard for him to grasp imperial system but metric system was a breeze for him.
@franekkkkk
@franekkkkk Жыл бұрын
Surprising lol
@sekou3758
@sekou3758 Жыл бұрын
Because Metric is the best
@thienquoc5790
@thienquoc5790 Жыл бұрын
Then just teach him the metric system if it's so much easier, no need to make your child go through that much mental torment.
@marvemarve8234
@marvemarve8234 Жыл бұрын
There’s a reason why pretty much the entire world is using it
@CUBETechie
@CUBETechie Жыл бұрын
It logical and easy to understand
@EustaH
@EustaH Жыл бұрын
The trick in getting used to metric is not to start using metric in your head - it's to stop using imperial. And it can be done. It's like learning a new language - at first you're translating everything in your head until eventually something clicks and you just think in a new language. But yeah, probably not feasible to do it alone - you need everybody else doing it to keep you going.
@brentsnocomgaming7813
@brentsnocomgaming7813 Жыл бұрын
That has actually happened to me with small measurements. Anything under half an inch makes more sense to me in mm because I have a German car I often work on and all the bolts are in metric, so when I think of a frame of reference from small units of length, i think of those bolt sizes, in Metric. I will use US Customary down the about a half inch then just switch over to mm. Anything over about 18mm becomes meaningless to me and anything under half an inch also becomes somewhat meaningless.
@waystadtymphyndir7079
@waystadtymphyndir7079 Жыл бұрын
Metric is the easiest language to learn, while teaching you a scientific logic that goes forwards and backwards with absolute accuracy using 1s and 0s. I will teach you a learning. Are you ready? 1+1=2 Congrats!...you now know the Metric System. Well done children. Gold Star for you all. Oh...by the way...as in money we use a "Coma" per Metric Currency...all you have to use is a "Dot" or in Imperial it might be called a "Period". A "Period" is a simular word that Women do not enjoy having as Math nuts hate hearing.
@Henry-sv3wv
@Henry-sv3wv Жыл бұрын
@@waystadtymphyndir7079 any woman that does have 60 periods per second does sound like an electric power station
@wimoweh
@wimoweh Жыл бұрын
@@waystadtymphyndir7079 try this 2+4= 3/8
@johnpombrio
@johnpombrio Жыл бұрын
I was a physics major in university so I learned the metric system and worked with it for years. As soon as I left the field tho, I lost the ability to estimate in metric. Later in life, I decided to do my woodworking in metric (I still have a metric tape measure and a meter stick) and run my thermometers in celsius. I made like two wood projects in metric and was SO frustrated that my metric tools are covered with sawdust. As for the temperature, I was constantly and secretly converting EVERY temperature back to Fahrenheit. Both totally failed. About the only thing that I can easily do is go from Kilometers to Miles and back as I have a pretty good feel for that and the conversion is so simple.
@rickicoughlan8299
@rickicoughlan8299 11 күн бұрын
I was 12 when Australia switched to metric in 1970. When everyone is using the same system you soon learn to estimate things and your brain gradually converts. However, we still cook using cups, teaspoons and tablespoons (and I don't near American recipes) and we still talk about cars having "good mileage" before quoting how many litres per 100km they get (don't ask me about the Kilowatt or horsepower things though). And sure in Athletics/Track and Field we run in metric distances but did they make tracks a distance which would make sense (i.e. 500m around)? No. They made them 400m so that running 3000m or 1500m means you've got to start in odd places and men still do the short hurdles over 110m to keep parity with old yards records and don't get me started about the 3000m steeplechase. In short, we never got on board properly with sports (except for swimming and diving). So in short this only works with a little bit of time if everyone around you gets on board.
@mass5904
@mass5904 24 күн бұрын
How to say you're lazy by not saying you're lazy John harris : I'm not using metric
@omicron1100
@omicron1100 Жыл бұрын
I was able to successfully calibrate my brain to metric by changing my map navigation to metric. Since you're constantly being given feedback on how many meters away you are from a given turn, it doesn't take long for your brain to be able to tell how far a kilometer is. I highly suggest giving it a try.
@privatemale27
@privatemale27 Жыл бұрын
I started with temperature, but am still not used to using it consistently...
@t0k4m4k7
@t0k4m4k7 Жыл бұрын
@@privatemale27 If you live in a moderate climate you just have to know that 0° is freezing so you can see ice or snow, 20 degrees is a comfortable shirt temperature, at 30 its hot and 100 you literally evaporate. After that it's all downhill. Btw even i can't guess better than plus or minus a couple degrees
@OkRake
@OkRake Жыл бұрын
I'll try it. I forsee a multitude of U-turns in my future
@paapali
@paapali Жыл бұрын
@@t0k4m4k7 wellllll you can actually exist in 100 degrees (celcius, ofc) for some time before you die. You can do that in a sauna.
@connorrothgeb
@connorrothgeb Жыл бұрын
I did this on a recent road trip to Canada. Google maps automatically switches to km when crossing the border and I changed my car’s measurements to metric too
@jordieneumann1712
@jordieneumann1712 Жыл бұрын
I had no concept of how long a kilometre was until i started driving around using maps. Siri saying “turn right in 900 metres” “turn left in 50 metres” really helped me understand what those measurements actually meant! Could be helpful if you are struggling to get it!
@dbclass4075
@dbclass4075 Жыл бұрын
It is a matter of practice. It may take some effort, as you have to deliberately try to implement metric in daily routine. But at the end, this will make it easier to interact internationally.
@TheNewGreenIsBlue
@TheNewGreenIsBlue Жыл бұрын
Or if you run with a smart watch make it a habit of running 5k or 10k which are pretty standard running distances. Highway exits usually have signs at 1200m and 400m, so every time you see ¾ mi just think 1200m. That being said, metric is "okay" but I DO prefer PARTS of the imperial system for it's mathematical bases. Having things based on 12 and 16 makes things really nice to work with. It's just too bad the French didn't choose to standardize the number system away from decimal and use dozenal (base 12). Would have made things so much better.
@fulltimemonti
@fulltimemonti Жыл бұрын
Thats funny, I have gotten angry at google when it tells me to turn in 400 feet. How long is that? 1/4 mile I can understand. Metric would make that easier.
@TheNewGreenIsBlue
@TheNewGreenIsBlue Жыл бұрын
@@fulltimemonti EXACTLY this. I mean, in REALITY, it doesn't matter how many METERS an exit is away either, it's just that 1200m is more clear than 1.2km. due to the decimal point, which really should be avoided when designing large signs that have to be read VERY quickly. That's why signs in the USA stick to MILES for everything, and you see ¼ mi and ¾ mile signs. Ironically, many metric architectural blueprints only EVERY use one unit anyhow... mm. a 2.5m wall is written as 2500. This avoids any confusion. Also, both the US and Canada standardized on teaching cm as a kind of base unit, but mm is just almost always superior. You almost NEVER need to get smaller than a mm in day to day life. cm were added to make an approximation to an inch... and it's an imperfect comparison and you end up using fractions a lot anyhow.
@apotheoz9196
@apotheoz9196 Жыл бұрын
@@TheNewGreenIsBlue dozenal is thrash, you can't easily make conversions since the base of usual numbers is 10 by 10. It would give something like hours to minutes and days, and that's a PITA to convert. I enjoy a base 10 way more for easy conversions.
@shmu_el
@shmu_el 5 ай бұрын
I get it... it's like travelling abroad and you have no idea how much stuff costs but if you live long enough there and get paid in the foreign currency it becomes the new norm. It's the same with all the countries accepting the Euro. It sucks at the beginning but after a while you even forget you used to trade everything in a different way. But I don't think you will change because the average American is too dumb to comprehend how much easier it is to use the metric system.
@baggio131276
@baggio131276 Ай бұрын
so in the olympics how much feet athletics run in 100metres? or 10,000metres?
@p.morgan4084
@p.morgan4084 Жыл бұрын
It's the reverse for me, I am French but studied urban planning in the US and I was always struggling with sqft, yards, acres... always secretly converting them to sqm, meters, hectares... to get a rough idea of what our teachers were talking about 😀
@siloetnatchanel
@siloetnatchanel Жыл бұрын
Vive la République, vive la France!
@sdamer4609
@sdamer4609 Жыл бұрын
@@siloetnatchanel Je m'appelle me Poo Poo!!
@siloetnatchanel
@siloetnatchanel Жыл бұрын
@@sdamer4609 ok I guess
@huquui8789
@huquui8789 Жыл бұрын
Apprendre l'urbanisme aux USA ? Pire idée ever ?
@siloetnatchanel
@siloetnatchanel Жыл бұрын
@@huquui8789 t'façon à partir du moment ou ça concerne pas des armes ou des burgers c'est pas la peine
@Topomato1
@Topomato1 6 ай бұрын
The fact that you made a 22-minute video on basically what is a matter of "being used to", highlights the quality of the content you're willing to create.
@kimgardner4464
@kimgardner4464 6 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. What your used to does not equate to what is better.
@lewis72
@lewis72 6 ай бұрын
Thanks. You've just saved me 20 minutes of my life.
@jensenraylight8011
@jensenraylight8011 6 ай бұрын
This is more Like Apologist video, might as well become johnny Harris Public Apology video, for using a weird measurement system
@Wolfeisberg
@Wolfeisberg 6 ай бұрын
@@lewis72 You really should watch it, because what the other guy said doesn't really give a good summary to it, the commenter is being really misleading about it. The video also includes the history of how the metric system was created, how one of the scientists who helped create it realized he made a mistake but didn't say anything about it for a good reason, how geopolitics and pirates are involved in why the USA didn't adopt the metric system. The video does explain why after many years of trying to train himself to use the metric system "naturally" in the same way Americans use imperial system "naturally" didn't actually work, and even trying to teach his own kids to use the metric system in a natural way also isn't working because of what they are exposed to throughout their life including school. The commenter you are saying "thanks" to is doing a huge disservice to you through dishonesty, disregarding a lot of historical and cultural information that is shared throughout the video.
@lewis72
@lewis72 6 ай бұрын
@@Wolfeisberg That is as may be but having a units system that isn't based on Base-10 is ridiculous.
@yixy5610
@yixy5610 5 ай бұрын
To learn Km, go running and use km on your watch. You will know how long your normal route is and get a feeling for kms quickly. That why I learned miles, because my watch was set to miles after a reset and I always forgot to change that after noticing during my runs thinking "wow, this first km feels veeeery long!"
@DCS_World_Japan
@DCS_World_Japan 5 ай бұрын
Skill issue. I moved abroad and adjusted to metric just fine.
@BoardroomBuddha
@BoardroomBuddha Жыл бұрын
I was raised in Canada when we converted to Metric overnight in the 1970s. Eventually, everyone has their own experience of what a kilometre is like, how much a litre is, what a gram of pot is vs. a kg of hamburger meat or what 5 C feels like. You just need to tie the physical experience to the theoretical measurement. It can be done in the USA.
@trashmammal454
@trashmammal454 Жыл бұрын
100% his excuse as to why he cant use metric boils down to he just didnt use it enough to get use to it.
@tschichpich
@tschichpich Жыл бұрын
@@trashmammal454 I feel like he said more that everything that surrounds him and his kids is imperial and that makes it so difficult to get the experience to be metric. For me a meter is about a step. Probably very off since that's my messure of being a kid but it's still in my head
@westonhaught1720
@westonhaught1720 Жыл бұрын
Idk when I visited Vancouver pizza sizes were still 12-14". Whats up with that Canada?
@AndreasDelleske
@AndreasDelleske Жыл бұрын
But not in 'MURICA.. the tribal zone currently occupied by about 50% reasonable people..
@martinpallmann
@martinpallmann Жыл бұрын
I had the same experience when we switched currencies in my country.
@wave1090
@wave1090 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a country that still uses some imperial units (and spanish imperial units which are just as crazy). For example, pounds and ounces are used to measuring mass there. Moved to Europe as a grown up having never really used kilograms for anything. Within a year I was completely converted to kilograms and had even forgotten what a pound was supposed to be. So it can definitely be done. You just need to give yourself time to adapt.
@Zerch-gi9qr
@Zerch-gi9qr Жыл бұрын
all except the United States We don't need to memorize anything because our perception is in meters from birth. studying science becomes easy.
@zarosonzyr6679
@zarosonzyr6679 Жыл бұрын
I've never heard about the existence of spanish imperial units, and I'm spanish.
@LanielPhoto
@LanielPhoto Жыл бұрын
A pound - that's a measurement of British money ! You kbnow - so many Shillings and Pence. How can you forget that ?
@jlklinck24
@jlklinck24 11 ай бұрын
And to be surrounded by it
@MKahn84
@MKahn84 11 ай бұрын
Why though?
@daninest511
@daninest511 6 күн бұрын
I’ve learned mathematics, and metric system in Europe, and now walking like strange guy , who measures with my own feet’s .
@rollycaidic
@rollycaidic 3 ай бұрын
Here in the Philippines we both use and we’re not confused
@fmsolee
@fmsolee 9 ай бұрын
It's funny to see, as an adult, the metric sistem explained in such detail. It's very weird to think that there's people out there who struggle to understand something so simple.
@artgoat
@artgoat 9 ай бұрын
It's even funnier when you find out how little Americans know about the system they think is "normal." As in the video above, where the woman thought a mile was 3,000 feet. You'd probably be hard-pressed to find anybody who could correctly answer that without looking it up. One of my favorites is the acre. That's a unit of square area, right? It's based on square feet, right? So how long, in feet, is one side of that square? IT'S AN IRRATIONAL NUMBER!
@Tickbeat
@Tickbeat 9 ай бұрын
I think an acre is like 200x200ft? But I do know exactly how many feet there are in a mile as I have had it ingrained in my head for years. 5,280 You can not believe that I didn't look this up but I'll have you know that I didn't.
@artgoat
@artgoat 9 ай бұрын
I can certainly believe you didn't look it up, because I also have it ingrained, along with 8 furlongs to the mile, and 1760 yards. An acre is 1/640 of a square mile, or 43,560 square feet (you were only off by 9%) . That means, not only can you not lay out a square mile AS a square with an even number of acres along each side (it's an irrational number), but you also can't lay out an acre as a regular square with an even number of feet along each side. 36 sections (square miles) make up one township. That, at least, is a 6x6 grid. Even more fun, the definition of a foot has changed over time, so when doing cartography, you have to know the year of the survey information. I know the American system quite intimately, which is one reason I loathe it so much. People who think it's "just fine" are those who never need to really use measurements in their daily life.
@logic3686
@logic3686 9 ай бұрын
It's not a lack of understanding, it's a lack of caring and need to. Why does is fking matter?
@Tickbeat
@Tickbeat 9 ай бұрын
@@logic3686 I mean, we don't need to, but it would make a lot of things way easier, both in our day-to-day lives, and in professional and scientific fields. It's way more logical and easy than the imperial system.
@joelboutier1736
@joelboutier1736 Жыл бұрын
Johnny... literally EVERYONE that changed over to the metric system in the past faced the same dilemma that you did. They weren't used to it. They got used to it & they got over it. Now, they enjoy a system where they don't gave to convert from a 1/16 in, feet to miles, or ounces to gallons. Now we're still stuck with this measurement system because people didn't want to adjust. They didn't get used to it & didn't get over it. Now we're still multiplying fractions & doing complicated conversions. I'm sure the adjustment we would have had to make would be long forgotten by now but we just didn't want to put in the effort. Now we're still stuck with it.
@Kevin-jb2pv
@Kevin-jb2pv Жыл бұрын
That's nice. You know, until you go to the hardware store and all the lumber is cut to inch measurements (that aren't even really the measurements they say they are but fuck don't get me started on that shit) and everything is still sold by the foot. It bugs me that so many people outside the U.S. shit on us for not using metric, but it's not like we can really switch to using it individually when everything around us is still in Imperial units. BTW, I think that, objectively, the way you guys measure fuel efficiency in the metric system is infinitely stupider than we measure it here, even with our dumb units.
@jackb7705
@jackb7705 Жыл бұрын
@@Kevin-jb2pv pretty sure you didn’t read the comment. The point is everyone had these same issues when they switched. You’re not special. It’s just that everyone else did it and gone on with life while you’re moaning about it all
@kingkiller5325
@kingkiller5325 Жыл бұрын
@@Kevin-jb2pv You realize that most other countries use Foot and inches too. A country can develop a system where both can be used when appropriate.
@khaelamensha3624
@khaelamensha3624 Жыл бұрын
Funny because I grew up using the metric system and as I watch and read a lot of American and British videos and books, I get to use the imperial system 😂 nothing hard, just like a lot pesaid, just have to get used to it.
@corivian
@corivian Жыл бұрын
You know this is true for most changes in the US, it is way more conservative than people in the US think themselves
@TheDmoores
@TheDmoores 11 күн бұрын
In England we use some measurements that are even older for railways, we still use "chainage"
@ChristLink-Channel
@ChristLink-Channel 9 күн бұрын
Not to mention furlongs... do you still use those for horse races, are has that now moved into the eighteenth century, with "feet" and "yards"?
@krombopulos_michael
@krombopulos_michael Жыл бұрын
I live in Ireland and we made the switch to metric in my lifetime to metric. I can say it takes time to rewire yourself but it isn't impossible. I think the main thing is that, like a language, it is hard to do it if your environment doesn't re-enforce it. I was used to miles and stones and feet but now they are hard for me to understand after so many years of only using the alternative. Americans could get used to the metric system but it would have to come from the top down, not just from individuals trying to learn it like a foreign language. It's going to be nearly impossible to think in French without being surrounded by French speakers, and the same way it will be hard to think in metric unless you're actually forced to use it and get frames of reference for it every day.
@vegigun
@vegigun Жыл бұрын
Pretty much. A few years ago I decided to change all my weather apps to use Celsius instead of Fahrenheit. At first it was odd, but I've gotten to the point where I'm used to it. I live in the US and I know approximately what I should wear when it's 15C outside ... and I'm starting to forget what I should wear when it's 70F out.
@swagmalone8092
@swagmalone8092 Жыл бұрын
@@vegigun honestly the temp measurement is way worse in imperial than the distance for me since how it makes sense in metric, water freeze=cold=0 degrees/ water boiling=hot=100 degrees. wtaf is 100 degrees f fgs, makes zero sense.
@gsrorive
@gsrorive Жыл бұрын
Same goes for all of us in the Eurozone who had to switch to Euros on some random Jan. 1st. I grew up with Francs, but now hardly know what it is because we learnt to use euros and cents. The days of converting everything are long gone. Does it take time and efforts? Yes. Is it impossible? No. Look at how Sweden suddenly had to learn to drive on the other side of the road in 1967. It seems impossible to me to drive in left-hand traffic, but it isn't; plenty of Brits seem to be doing just fine when they visit too.
@MrMurkosullivan
@MrMurkosullivan Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Reducing intellectual expectations of a nation to the lowest common denominator never leads to global progress for our civilisation. Another moment I'm proud to be Irish.
@grassfedreeve
@grassfedreeve Жыл бұрын
Yep, I moved to Australia as an adult. Swapping over was strange at first with lots of mental maths, but now I think in metric and it’s strange to talk to my family overseas when they use imperial hahah. A huge one for me was cooking and buying food, grams for everything works so well.
@danielfigueroa8333
@danielfigueroa8333 Жыл бұрын
The worst feeling in my engineering classes is getting test questions using imperial units and having to remeber all these conversions
@efxnews4776
@efxnews4776 Жыл бұрын
Imperial system makes no sense, simply because our math is decimal, we learn math as decimal for one simple reason, OUR FINGERS! We literally learn to count using our fingers, wich means our brains are hardwired to use decimal system, we been doing this since humans exist.
@vikingthedude
@vikingthedude Жыл бұрын
Yeah we humans like self torture.
@westman8527
@westman8527 Жыл бұрын
Five tomatoes - how many feet in a mile
@Kriss352
@Kriss352 Жыл бұрын
US engineering schools teach in imperial system ? So gross. Just move to another continent, trust me.
@mcloughlinguy4127
@mcloughlinguy4127 Жыл бұрын
@@Kriss352 heard the Netherlands is a nice place
@julianvanevera
@julianvanevera 22 күн бұрын
I'm American and the Metric system is easy to learn. Learnt it about a year or two ago and have never regretted it since.
@thedubwhisperer2157
@thedubwhisperer2157 25 күн бұрын
Quickly, what's half of 11 miles, 975 feet and 2 19/32inches? What's half of 18km?
@imagesbyraphael
@imagesbyraphael Жыл бұрын
Australia went metric in the 70's and as a schoolkid, we grew up with rulers (typically 30cm) which had inches on one edge and centimetres on the other. So we always had a good idea that 12" was about 30cm. Today, you can still buy tape measure which has inches/feet on one edge and (centi)metres on the other.
@rembrantwithagrenade171
@rembrantwithagrenade171 Жыл бұрын
Same in India, we use metric, but also use some imperial units.
@kiwizoey413
@kiwizoey413 Жыл бұрын
Same in Taiwan where the inch has never been used
@2kingjesus901
@2kingjesus901 Жыл бұрын
Same in Kenya. In fact when I think of height I think of feet and inches not centimetres. Never have.
@WBDelgado
@WBDelgado Жыл бұрын
Same 🇨🇦
@InvalidUser_
@InvalidUser_ Жыл бұрын
Same in England but they're being fazed out
@steffenstein17
@steffenstein17 Жыл бұрын
What is interesting in this context is that both the inch (2.54 cm) and the feet ( 30.48 cm) are now defined on the basis of SI units (metric).
@PvblivsAelivs
@PvblivsAelivs Жыл бұрын
I believe you mean "re-defined."
@lred1383
@lred1383 Жыл бұрын
@@PvblivsAelivs yes, because their old definitions were unreliable, and physicists don't care about them enough to give them their own definitions
@seabell
@seabell Жыл бұрын
Oh yes. Similarly, the pound is now defined as 0.45359237 kg
@deutscher1a
@deutscher1a Жыл бұрын
@@PvblivsAelivs isnt "re-defined" literally the same as "now defined"
@jackherbic6048
@jackherbic6048 Жыл бұрын
well kind of, now they are both redefined using universal constants.
@chrislusk3531
@chrislusk3531 27 күн бұрын
Making moonshine is much easier with metric, but outside of that... 'MERICA!
@nickthenightfly82
@nickthenightfly82 5 ай бұрын
my height: 182cm. 6'00'' is 182,88cm. this means there is no chance to convert the precise height in the imperial system, or I can say it's 5'11,9"? imperial honestly seems to me bs.
@sidorgeorge
@sidorgeorge 22 күн бұрын
Just measure yourself either in the morning, or the evening. You are taller in the morning, and shorter in evening. Take the measurement that's closer. And even if you never hit a precise inch, other people will.
@Neehize
@Neehize 12 күн бұрын
That's about 71.6536 inches or 5 feet and 11.6536 inches. To be fair, you could also be exactly 6 feet but 182.879901216 cm high and say that there is no way to convert your precise height to the metric system.
@Neehize
@Neehize 3 күн бұрын
@@wannacry6586 No that would be 1 m 828 mm 799 µm 012 nm 160 pm But that's still rounded up, and in any case, nobody would ever want to give their height with such a small unit scale.
@wannacry6586
@wannacry6586 2 күн бұрын
@@Neehize i know but im too lazy to fix it lmfao. Hope it still got the point across
@mikosoft
@mikosoft Жыл бұрын
As many many commenters pointed out, yes, you still can teach it not only yourself but also your kids and pretty much anyone. But there has to be a country wide switch. Same as we, a European country switched from our own currency to Euro. We had a one year transition period where all prices were mandatory double labeled. After that, everybody got used to euro, even my then 70 years old grandma and her friends. You just need to DO IT.
@nicolasmartin-minaret6157
@nicolasmartin-minaret6157 Жыл бұрын
yeah, but she wasn't American :)
@benjaminrodary1788
@benjaminrodary1788 Жыл бұрын
I was gonna say the same thing; I was 20+ when france changed from francs to euros, it took me a while to adapt, it took my parents even more, but after a while it become natural. BUT it have to be a national change because, as you said, as long as your children (or even you) only see imperial measurements in your daily life, you wont be able to change.
@libelinhaa2079
@libelinhaa2079 Жыл бұрын
So true a couple of years after the change no one could be bother to try to convert to the old coin it worked perfectly
@daroaminggnome
@daroaminggnome Жыл бұрын
Yeah but theres just no reason to do it. If you work in a field where it matters then you can use metric just fine no ones bothered by it, meanwhile in every day life imperial does not impact the vast majority of us. I'm not losing anything because I think of distance in miles instead of kilometers or because I measure in cups when cooking.
@libelinhaa2079
@libelinhaa2079 Жыл бұрын
@@daroaminggnomeI was actually surprised to know that American labels are in the metric system because how are you supposed to understand what you are buying if you can't understand what is in it? I know most people don't even look at the labels but the only reason they exist is to inform the customer so this is kind of like writing a label in a different language at least that's how I see it.
@michaeljones559
@michaeljones559 Жыл бұрын
I'm an American expat living in Europe. I decided to take the metric plunge, and started with temperature. I found that if I simply never referenced Fahrenheit and always looked up the temp in Celsius, that before long I intuitively knew what the Celsius degrees felt like. Now I can usually guess the temperature within a degree. For other measurements I found volume the next easiest, then distance. Weight has been the most difficult.
@MacNerfer
@MacNerfer Жыл бұрын
That's probably the best way to do it. Weight isn't too bad for me to convert kg and pounds, but anything else would take some doing.
@JakeDerg_CS
@JakeDerg_CS Жыл бұрын
just remember distances are base 10s. 1Km = 1000m = 100000cm etc it even works going into small values 1cm is 10mm etc
@saybrowt
@saybrowt Жыл бұрын
You're not an expat, you're an immigrant.
@MacNerfer
@MacNerfer Жыл бұрын
@@saybrowt Do you even know what an expat is? And why is that the most important thing about his post?
@saybrowt
@saybrowt Жыл бұрын
@@MacNerfer Yes, an immigrant. Don't make up fancy words for yourself cause you consider yourself to be better.
@abadi173
@abadi173 22 күн бұрын
a video about the electrical socket around the world is in order
@jackwmcguire
@jackwmcguire 4 ай бұрын
Me: What are the marks on the other side of the ruler? My first grade teacher: Don't worry you'll never use those :)
@PatricioHondagneuRoig
@PatricioHondagneuRoig Жыл бұрын
Now that's a fast way to get people to dislike the video without even watching it.
@Levitationable
@Levitationable Жыл бұрын
Lol. That's true.
@danieldey
@danieldey Жыл бұрын
I did exactly that, lol, too bad KZfaq to away the dislike count :'(
@rocksmo3384
@rocksmo3384 Жыл бұрын
@@danieldey You can see it with an add on (return dislikes)
@upvotecomment2110
@upvotecomment2110 Жыл бұрын
This Channel Always amazes me with its mental gymnastics towards America
@danieldey
@danieldey Жыл бұрын
@@rocksmo3384 yeah, still not available on mobile I guess, but thanks bro, will add it on my laptop :)
@centrismo9110
@centrismo9110 11 ай бұрын
I'm from Brazil. Here in Brazil we made the shift from Portuguese Imperial Units to the metric system in 1862. It was 161 years ago. Today, EVERYBODY use the meters and kilometers and almost nobody knows about the existence of another measurement system.
@alexdavies8079
@alexdavies8079 11 ай бұрын
ofc
@BornToBeUai
@BornToBeUai 10 ай бұрын
Do you realize their arguments? 22 minutes to justify MURICA
@castillo5148
@castillo5148 10 ай бұрын
​@@BornToBeUaifuck murica
@centrismo9110
@centrismo9110 10 ай бұрын
@@castillo5148 The US is a great country, but they should get rid of these units of measurements
@impulsivez4825
@impulsivez4825 3 ай бұрын
Im from USA and I hate that we don't use metric lol
@TheBrowncoatcat
@TheBrowncoatcat 12 күн бұрын
It is said that Jefferson's blacksmith had a wonky scale, meaning the US Pound was smaller than the UK pound. So the US pint is smaller than a UK pint.
@hitik7350
@hitik7350 7 ай бұрын
As an student of Engineering, I found it nightmare to use Imperial units in calculations
@physiocrat7143
@physiocrat7143 6 ай бұрын
There are horses for courses. For household and artisan applications the metric system is a nuisance eg rulers marked in millimetres too small to see.
@christophelegal9194
@christophelegal9194 6 ай бұрын
@@physiocrat7143 Lol. Get one with 2 millimeters graduations then.
@physiocrat7143
@physiocrat7143 6 ай бұрын
@@christophelegal9194 Who sells them? Never seen any. They wouldn't work properly anyway as you still need to divide centimetres into halves and the 5 mm markings have to be fitted in.
@sluin
@sluin 6 ай бұрын
Yea but it's better than looking what fraction of an inch something is.​@@physiocrat7143
@DriveCarToBar
@DriveCarToBar 6 ай бұрын
​@@christophelegal9194don't tell him that a 1/16th inch graduation on his trusty old Stanley tape is ~1.5mm.
@KAUFFMANN7
@KAUFFMANN7 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the definition of imperial units, as the US is member of the Bureau des poids et mesures, is directly dependent of the metric system. The imperial system is just a overcomplicated variant of the metric system
@TheMoparman
@TheMoparman Жыл бұрын
I don't find it complicated. I'm used to it, so it's more or less second nature. All the meter-meter-meter is confusing
@Aeronaut1975
@Aeronaut1975 Жыл бұрын
Which Imperial system? US or British?
@TheMoparman
@TheMoparman Жыл бұрын
@@Aeronaut1975 The only one that matters anymore. US.
@seba8985
@seba8985 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the definition of metric units, as defined by of the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, is directly dependent on immutable physical constants. The metric system is just an overcomplicated variant of real physical constants.
@Aeronaut1975
@Aeronaut1975 Жыл бұрын
@@TheMoparmanTell me you're American, but without telling me you're an American. World Trade is done in Metric tonnes (1,000Kg)and not the US short ton. As far as I'm aware the USA is the only country that uses short tons, the same goes for a few other Imperial (US, not British) measurements.
@samuelmontenegroserniotti7146
@samuelmontenegroserniotti7146 Ай бұрын
Say what you will, but the "wtf is a kilometer" meme will always be hilarious.
@marcderiveau2421
@marcderiveau2421 2 ай бұрын
How much do you weigh? Two stones and three pebbles. Thank you Mr Flintstone
@professionalnugget
@professionalnugget Жыл бұрын
As a foreigner, I feel the same way you described at the end of the video about imperial, everything in my everyday life is in metric units, I'm not able to convert imperial units very efficiently bc I learned everything in metric growing up. I understand why metric doesn't really matter for your average American, but it is crucial for people that actually work in scientific fields.
@Darkness-ng8lv
@Darkness-ng8lv Жыл бұрын
Iam sad that he said "using the cubit to build the pyramids in 'cairo'" like why I know it is giza not cairo
@Biriadan
@Biriadan Жыл бұрын
imperial measurements are still widely used in aerospace engineering so.
@thegamesmob2001
@thegamesmob2001 Жыл бұрын
@@Biriadan not outside the US
@gregedwards1087
@gregedwards1087 Жыл бұрын
@@Biriadan, only in the US and probably very few companies altogether, ALL scientific ventures are now Metric across the world, so Metric is required in EVERY country, (US included) to be able to pursue a Scientific career, it is only a matter of time before the US ends up going Metric in everyday life. Suck it up and move on.
@denaamisdaan
@denaamisdaan Жыл бұрын
@@Biriadan Also, NASA lost a spacecraft by not implementing the right metric/imperial system. If the whole world uses metric this wouldn't have happened. It doesn't matter what the US thinks/feels, the rest of the world uses metric and the US should too.
@tylervanprooyen1848
@tylervanprooyen1848 Жыл бұрын
I'm a metrologist and we strictly use metric in the lab. I really enjoy it over imperial. Best way to learn metric is having a relational thing to it. Just how it's done with any measurement system. Have objects that are normally a certain size, like 10mm for example. From there it's easy to start understanding how it works.
@KJPCox
@KJPCox Жыл бұрын
I grew up using the metric system. It's funny seeing how you don't automatically convert between units, probably beacause it's hard in imperial units. Here people would say 1cm instead of 10 mm.
@rmsgrey
@rmsgrey Жыл бұрын
@@KJPCox But have you ever encountered people casually using dm? Where I'm from, people use cm because that's a convenient human scale unit (bearing a relationship to inches similar to the relationship between Fahrenheit and Celsius) and mm for precision or scientific work. Without more context, I would understand "1cm" as meaning "probably between 0.3 and 2cm" while "10mm" would say to me "between 9.5 and 10.5mm"
@johnneedham7569
@johnneedham7569 Жыл бұрын
@@KJPCox In my experience most sicence/engineering fields completly ignore the cm and just stick with the base 1000 units (mm, m, km, ect) but i agree, if someone were to tell me something is 300mm long i would convert it into 30cm in my head first.
@KJPCox
@KJPCox Жыл бұрын
@@rmsgrey That's true, dm is rarely used, same as hm (100 m). I don't really understand what you are saying about the rounding. If precision is important you can say 1.0 cm so you have two significant digits, but this applies to all numbers and units.
@KJPCox
@KJPCox Жыл бұрын
@@johnneedham7569 I'm no engineer, but as a physician I use cm a lot (size of lesions etc).
@danr1920
@danr1920 5 ай бұрын
Why 360 degrees in a circle? 24 hours in a day. Shouldn't they be metricized too?
@KirkVredevelt
@KirkVredevelt 3 ай бұрын
The reason is our land system of measurement was successfully in place before the metric system could be considered. Without compulsory implementation it won’t happen. In the 1970s a popular local gas station began selling in liters. People avoided buying their gas for fear of being ripped off and the inability to calculate mpg. So out of business interests they went back to gallons.
@TheCaro2
@TheCaro2 9 ай бұрын
In short: Not using the metric system, because pre-school children in europe can measure meters but as an american, I am unable. You got that right :)
@dhruvrathee
@dhruvrathee Жыл бұрын
Wait till you realize that in many countries, a mix of both systems is used. In India, people use kms for long distances, liters for volume but sq.ft for area and feet for measuring heights 😅
@yourfellowhumanbeing2323
@yourfellowhumanbeing2323 Жыл бұрын
Do we use feet for measuring height???
@parthbhargava3167
@parthbhargava3167 Жыл бұрын
Namaskar doston
@kruspepoq8985
@kruspepoq8985 Жыл бұрын
Same in Canada, British relics
@lightyagami9959
@lightyagami9959 Жыл бұрын
Wassup my man 👋
@balakumaravel7034
@balakumaravel7034 Жыл бұрын
haha true.but these days atleast school going students mostly use centimeters for height as medical check up reports mention it in metric system.also 1liter = 1000ml so its atleast better than that 29.547.... conversion for ounces
@greifinn24
@greifinn24 Ай бұрын
some architects devised a metric degree with 100 in a right angle and 400 in a circle, a builder in my town concreted huge vats for herring storage, he built in 90 degrees to the right angle but the architects had used 100 . hilarity and mayhem ensued .
@acb9896
@acb9896 4 ай бұрын
"....just an everyday guy, like me..." °eats Doritos with chop sticks°
@timonix2
@timonix2 Ай бұрын
It's clearly superior. Buttered popcorn too. Why get your hands dirty when you can use chop sticks? They are great for oily snacks
@AdrienTheDrummerGuy
@AdrienTheDrummerGuy Жыл бұрын
My parents and grandparents grew up using the imperial system fahrenheit, miles, pounds, the lot. They 100% switched to metric in the late 70s and now do not internally know the distance of a mile... Canada did it 🤙
@pingpong3311
@pingpong3311 11 ай бұрын
The only reason I know about the imperial system is because I go to America to visit family.
@dosdont
@dosdont 11 ай бұрын
I'm of the age where we transitioned to the metric system while I was in school in the 70's and when it comes to metric vs imperial, my brain is scrambled, I visualize some things in imperial and some things in metric, it's actually a pain and have to constantly pull out a ruler or tape measure or google the conversion of things. For example, if you tell me something is 270mm, I can't visualize it but if you say something is about 10.5", I can visualize it. Very frustrating.
@hypercube8735
@hypercube8735 11 ай бұрын
Canada still uses specific imperial units for a lot of day-to-day things, at least in my neck of the woods. Distances are measured in centimetres, metres, kilometres, etc., but human height is in feet and inches (when people from other metric-using countries say things like "I'm 170 cm tall" I don't have any real intuitive mental understanding of how tall that is, aside "180 cm is roughly six feet" and then having to do mental math from there. Admittedly, a lot of that might be from not meeting a lot of them in person - most of the people I know in the real world are Canadians or Americans, and not being able to look at how tall they are to map that "I'm 170 cm tall" statement to a real-world height you can see probably hurts on that front). Human weight also tends to be in pounds. Most other weights are in grams and kilograms, except for meat and produce at the grocery store, which is in pounds (although boxed goods like cereals and the like are in grams again)... temperature measurements seem to be based on how recently you bought your appliances like thermostats and ovens (which can lead to weird things like thinking about the outdoor temperature and weather in terms of degrees celsius, but indoor temperatures and cooking temperatures in degrees fahrenheit). A lot of recipes still use measurements like teaspoons and tablespoons and cups (when I get measurements that *do* use grams I feel like I'm back in a chemistry lab). Formal settings all use metric, but there are still some informal day-to-day uses where imperial seems to be more common. Oddly I can't think of any places where imperial volume measurements are used in Canada these days: even canned soft drinks say things like "355 mL" instead of "12 fluid ounces" even though the imperial measurement is the more precise one for that container (the can is exactly 12 ounces, so it's technically 354.882 mL, and they just round to the nearest whole number since mL are tiny anyway).
@cewla3348
@cewla3348 11 ай бұрын
@@dosdont eh 270mm is just 27cm
@dosdont
@dosdont 11 ай бұрын
@@cewla3348 I understand that, but I think you missed my point
Жыл бұрын
You know what's even cooler now? The International system stoped using "tangible" references (because they are susceptible to change) and now uses physics constants for each unit definition. Making them...well...constant jeje
@CaroAbebe
@CaroAbebe Жыл бұрын
Exactly! 😁
@fredferd2649
@fredferd2649 Жыл бұрын
stoped?
@Eclairiuss
@Eclairiuss Жыл бұрын
@@fredferd2649 yeah, they start with the meter, with the speed of light, time with the atoms, etc...
@TamissonReis
@TamissonReis Жыл бұрын
But what is cool is they choose to keep using the universe as the ruler. The constant are not arbitrary, they are constants that universe provides.
@rotciv1486
@rotciv1486 Жыл бұрын
they recently got it for the kilogram using the Planck Constant!!
@rishankgupta6455
@rishankgupta6455 3 ай бұрын
Hey, I don't know how if you still reply to to video, but I had semi - related question but I am very bad at guesstimates, I have never been to tell how far a place would be or how heavy a things on just feel and without actually measuring it and in my mind when someone provide their own guesstimates I genuinely have no clue how they got to that. So is this a something I am missing or I am just bad with numbers?. Ps. I am really bad at guessing people's age like not even close.
@Swatotastic
@Swatotastic 2 ай бұрын
Eating Doritos with chopsticks is different type of crazy
@BeaverChainsaw
@BeaverChainsaw 21 күн бұрын
I'm Korean and I still that's insane
@iancameron6457
@iancameron6457 Жыл бұрын
I moved to europe about eight years ago, metric is great that the principal is understandable immediately. It took about two or three years because most measurements you've ever known are imperial but my mind really appreciated the logic and much deeper context of metric and now the imperial units I grew up on seem foreign and illogical to me
@Skraeling1000
@Skraeling1000 Жыл бұрын
OMG you've gone native lol! I had a sort of opposite experience, growing up in UK with imperial, then switched (mostly) to metric - then I moved to the US and I sort of liked having the old measurements again. Except, as was pointed out, the US pint is smaller than the UK pint. So I always feel I'm being scammed when I buy a beer :D
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 Жыл бұрын
@@Skraeling1000 In the good old days, a Danish "inch" was different from a Norwegian "inch" (Actually, Tomme!), which operated with the same, insane system. So when the French found out to make a logical system we soon joined and actually got some of the finest measure samples which became made, to take home to Denmark
@joenobody5913
@joenobody5913 Жыл бұрын
Just out of curiosity, have you enjoyed your move overseas? The older I get the more frustrated I've grown in the US and quite frankly I'm ready to gtfo of here. From those I've talked to a lot of them have been glad to have made the move. Really just seems to be what country to go to now...Thanks, any info appreciated
@Skraeling1000
@Skraeling1000 Жыл бұрын
@@joenobody5913 Two main aspects stand out on the negative side - healthcare (of course lol) and the vacation (or lack of) system in many areas of industry. On the plus side, gas and cigs are cheaper here. What country to go to though - I think they are all having their own problems right now, but if you only speak English then the big three, GB, Australia or Canada. If you are fluent in Spanish then .. well, Spain!
@1992jamo
@1992jamo Жыл бұрын
@@Skraeling1000 Because the US doesn't actually use Imperial. It's uses "US Customary Measurements" which was adopted in 1833 but based on the already outdated "English Units" that had been replaced by imperial in 1826.
This American YouTuber “can’t” use metric. Here’s why I do now
18:12
Is The Metric System Actually Better?
12:53
Real Engineering
Рет қаралды 2,5 МЛН
Playing hide and seek with my dog 🐶
00:25
Zach King
Рет қаралды 33 МЛН
Little girl's dream of a giant teddy bear is about to come true #shorts
00:32
Как бесплатно замутить iphone 15 pro max
00:59
ЖЕЛЕЗНЫЙ КОРОЛЬ
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Scary Teacher 3D Nick Troll Squid Game in Brush Teeth White or Black Challenge #shorts
00:47
The real reasons the US refuses to go metric
7:57
Verge Science
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
What Game Theory Reveals About Life, The Universe, and Everything
27:19
Why 'Got Milk' was a Lie
29:59
Johnny Harris
Рет қаралды 3,4 МЛН
Why is Russia So DAMN BIG?
17:25
Johnny Harris
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
The Man Who Accidentally Killed The Most People In History
24:57
Veritasium
Рет қаралды 32 МЛН
It's Not Just Shein: Why Are ALL Your Clothes Worse Now?
19:35
More Perfect Union
Рет қаралды 1,6 МЛН
Your Thoughts on the Johnny Harris Metric Video Surprised Me
20:15
Evan Edinger
Рет қаралды 253 М.
Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains The Three-Body Problem
11:45
StarTalk
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
I Took an IQ Test to Find Out What it Actually Measures
34:29
Veritasium
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
Playing hide and seek with my dog 🐶
00:25
Zach King
Рет қаралды 33 МЛН