a defense of the imperial measurement system

  Рет қаралды 1,156,010

jan Misali

jan Misali

2 жыл бұрын

it's not as bad as people say it is (but it is still pretty bad)
the chart: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...
NIST handbook appendix C: www.nist.gov/system/files/doc...
Revised Unit Conversion Factors: www.nist.gov/pml/us-surveyfoo...
Weights and Measures Act 1985 Schedule 1: www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/...
see also:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahrenh...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsolet...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi_(un...
/ hbmmaster
conlangcritic.bandcamp.com
seximal.net
/ hbmmaster
/ janmisali

Пікірлер: 9 300
@HBMmaster
@HBMmaster 2 жыл бұрын
this is largely a response to this joke video matt parker made in 2013 kzbin.info/www/bejne/qGjbXoV9m8ljj80
@mers-ulito6316
@mers-ulito6316 2 жыл бұрын
hmm
@fatherpoochie2454
@fatherpoochie2454 2 жыл бұрын
We could always try reeducating the populace en masse... Or perfectionists can just cope.
@ltpetrenko
@ltpetrenko 2 жыл бұрын
The PAIN of imperial units becomes unbearable when you do even primitive engineering. E.g. in SI force: N = kg*m/s^2, work: J = N*m, power: W=J/s. Check those out in imperial, all that zoo of variations and accompanying conversion constants. As a bonus, say, estimate the force exerted by a water stream of 1lb/s at 1ft/s. Does divisibility by 12 or 16 makes it easier?
@mirabletest
@mirabletest 2 жыл бұрын
Bringing back KZbin video responses
@memsom
@memsom 2 жыл бұрын
I think you have missed that the UK system this is all based on has more units between a lot of these and they were used. Furlong and chain, for example. And stones in weight. We laugh at the US using pounds, we use stones and you ridiculously high numbers are massively reduced in the UK.
@nickthompson2023
@nickthompson2023 Жыл бұрын
This chart is missing so many of the most used measurements in the US: blocks, football fields, over yonder’s, down-a-ways, go-thata-ways, hop-skip-and-a-jumps, ain’t-too-fars, outa-my-ways, and many others.
@Nick-bb4nk
@Nick-bb4nk Жыл бұрын
Around the corner and just over the hill
@TexasEngineer
@TexasEngineer Жыл бұрын
Then there is my favorite: Close enough for government work. I am not sure what type of unit this is in.
@robertlewis6915
@robertlewis6915 Жыл бұрын
@@TexasEngineer It's the formal definition of idgaf.
@idek6585
@idek6585 Жыл бұрын
"Just-outside-of-(insert-major-city)"
@jacobfreeman5054
@jacobfreeman5054 Жыл бұрын
A stone toss away
@petersmythe6462
@petersmythe6462 2 жыл бұрын
"Mass of a liter of water" Diogenes walks into the room, holding one liter of Deuterated Oxygen-18 water: *BEHOLD, THE KILOGRAM!*
@thatcherbuck
@thatcherbuck 2 жыл бұрын
I laughed way harder than is reasonable for this joke
@winterforlife
@winterforlife 2 жыл бұрын
Or kim jong un walking in with one liter of heavy water (water with deuterium)
@Anonymous-df8it
@Anonymous-df8it 2 жыл бұрын
@@winterforlife Kim Jong Un might use that larger kilogram to claim he isn't fat!
@bootmii98
@bootmii98 2 жыл бұрын
Water evaporated, distilled, and deionized from the ocean
@Otzkar
@Otzkar 2 жыл бұрын
I can't believe he would snitch on the goldsmith like that
@ryanm.191
@ryanm.191 Жыл бұрын
As my engineering professor says; imperial is fine as long as you’re not doing anything important
@71midnight
@71midnight Жыл бұрын
mmm you mean like going to the moon? ps i know some metric was used but the bolts nuts welder rivits and evey thing that made and help make it was not metric some of the calculations were done in metric but only a bit of it
@ryanm.191
@ryanm.191 Жыл бұрын
@@71midnight exactly! Or building the countries pride and joy aircraft. It’s reassuring when flying in a Boeing knowing it’s metric
@71midnight
@71midnight Жыл бұрын
@@ryanm.191 I think you may have miss read I am not that good at explaining some things I say all of the spaceship was made with imperial metric was only done with some calculations on the flight course and that's it
@axthla8435
@axthla8435 Жыл бұрын
@Angelita Moore What do you mean? NASA uses exclusively metric and has done for 30+ years. Before that even then they still consistently used Metric to measure things such as heat on aircraft when accelerating into the atmosphere, length of certain parts, and etc.
@71midnight
@71midnight Жыл бұрын
@@axthla8435 ​ @axethelad yes but everything that was used to make it was not metric this was in the 60's metric tools were very rare in the US at that time only a few thousand and and that was mainly in the automotive industry. The cars that they drove to work the tools that they used the building that they were in the engine components and thrust components the carts and dollys the effect of aerodynamics came from the Air Force as well as Boeing and Northrop and other Aviation companies most of the parts were made in Imperial you said it you self nasa uses exclusively metric and has done for 30 years well yes your right on that nasa did not exclusively use metric when they were first started sending spaceships Nasa uses far more Imperial than you might realize at that time it was mostly Imperial
@frtzkng
@frtzkng Жыл бұрын
The weirder and more obscure the units sound, e.g. furlong and hand, the more likely it is that they're used by people involved in some way with horses
@logandarnell8946
@logandarnell8946 8 ай бұрын
exactly my experience as well, the first time I heard about hands, it was from an equestrian.
@jassenjj
@jassenjj 4 ай бұрын
And isn't it funny... that a foot is not obscure, but a hand is. Of course, d*cks are out of consideration because sizes vary a lot :D
@FakeGuthix01
@FakeGuthix01 4 ай бұрын
Furlongs were used to measure sections of fields for farming and most of the world actually has an analogous unit of length in their traditional systems. Literally "furrow length".
@longbow3082
@longbow3082 3 ай бұрын
​@@logandarnell8946horses can't talk
@mcglk
@mcglk 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair, barleycorns are actually still used in the present-day US. They're hidden behind "shoe size," but the difference between any two consecutive shoe sizes is a barleycorn: 1/3 of an inch.
@madiis18account
@madiis18account 2 жыл бұрын
no fuckin way
@hetsmiecht1029
@hetsmiecht1029 2 жыл бұрын
In Europe, shoe sizes are a mess (probably also in other parts of the world, but idk): every shoe brand has the shoe sizes slightly skewed towards either bigger or smaller, meaning that you cannot use the size to accurately determine whether your toe will hit the end of the shoe or not. Sometimes the shoe size is also given in centimeters, but even that cannot be compared between brands because everyone seems to use the same conversion table instead of actually measuring anything. It's like the size of the shoe has been measured in cm, that number was passed to someone else who in their head converted it to inches, passed to someone else who converted it in their head to cm, passed to someone else who in their head converted it to inches, passed to someone else who converted it in their head to cm, passed to someone else who in their head converted it to inches, passed to someone else who converted it in their head to cm, only to be converted to the shoe size from the number that was left over after all those approximations during conversion.
@soasertsus
@soasertsus 2 жыл бұрын
@@hetsmiecht1029 In Japan we use exclusively cm for shoe sizes. You would think that would mean you could just measure your foot or one of your existing shoes and then order the same size, but somehow it manages to still be a huge ordeal to find shoes that fit properly. It never ceases to amaze how two different brands can make two shoes that are supposedly 27cm but one is way too big and the other is way too small.
@ClementinesmWTF
@ClementinesmWTF 2 жыл бұрын
Shoe sizes are objectively the worst measurement systems the world around. Some claim to increment based on fixed lengths (barleycorn, cm, in, or whatever you want to choose) that never seem consistent. Most are more like Celsius and Fahrenheit than Kelvin (why is a woman’s size *always* 1.5 sizes larger than a men’s??? Why is size 0 not a non-existent shoe??). Men’s, women’s, and children’s sizes rarely match up, even in the same systems. None of that even gets into width! We need some shoe (and in general clothing) size standardizations the world over way more than the US needs to completely drop customary.
@puellanivis
@puellanivis 2 жыл бұрын
@@ClementinesmWTF I mean, most of the world already uses cm for shoe sizes. But as Mari and Het Smiecht both mention, just because we size in cm doesn’t mean that this actually aligns to real-world consistency, because everyone defines how to measure the same dimensions differently.
@iivin4233
@iivin4233 2 жыл бұрын
You might define a unit of weight as being equal to 7000 grains of barely because it was the volume of a commonly used shipping crate. Then it might turn out that it makes sense to reckon the volume of ships' holds in terms of the this customary unit, the amount of barley it can hold. Usually there are reasons for things. Usually those reasons made more sense at the time.
@reseptivaras
@reseptivaras 2 жыл бұрын
barley?
@otherperson
@otherperson 2 жыл бұрын
Yup. Exactly.
@MarcusMedomRyding
@MarcusMedomRyding 2 жыл бұрын
Just like how we often today denote container ship sizes in "how many containers can it hold", TEU (twenty-foot equivalent unit)
@soasertsus
@soasertsus 2 жыл бұрын
@@MarcusMedomRyding In like 200 years there's gonna be one of those charts like "omg did you guys know there's a unit called a container that's equal to 20 feet? Isn't that wacky!" The context of 20 foot containers being a good size to fit with all of our shipping, rail and trucking infrastructure might be lost as technology evolves. Metric units were designed artificially with the priority on a rationalist aesthetic and are obviously better for science as a result, meanwhile imperial units were designed for a specific use-case over a long period of time and generally prioritize function over clean conversions, they're not really comparable systems because they had different goals from the start.
@claudio_wild1074
@claudio_wild1074 2 жыл бұрын
In defense of water over barley, it is a resource that is necessary for human survival and therefore found/used in every human society. Whereas barley does not have this same advantage. Not gonna comment on why a liter of water tho
@thejellydonut7587
@thejellydonut7587 Жыл бұрын
For those who have always wondered whose massive feet we based the "foot" off of, try measuring a hefty work boot, which is more like what most people would have worn on a daily basis at the time. Nobody is barefoot when they want to measure something out.
@sponge1234ify
@sponge1234ify Жыл бұрын
Is there an equivalent Hefty Work Sandals? the hollands didn't leave us any :(
@Squagglimole
@Squagglimole Жыл бұрын
Yeah but Henry I normed it So you're calculating with the King of England's boot.
@GH-oi2jf
@GH-oi2jf Жыл бұрын
My shoes are conveniently very close to one foot long. If yours are not, you just have to calibrate it. It is probably more useful to calibrate your pace, however.
@LeavingGoose046
@LeavingGoose046 11 ай бұрын
It is very handy to get a rough approximation of how big something is at work by just carefully walking, or by using my thumbs. If I ever need to quickly make sure I'm not too off a measure, and I left my tape measure somewhere and I can't bother to pick it up, boom foot n thumb time
@5ucur
@5ucur 11 ай бұрын
My feet are roughly 1'1⅜. So that's about 111.5% more. Roughly, good enough for small measurements! But if I used my feet to measure longer things in US feet, I'd have to add a whole foot every 7.5ish of mine, or more precisely, 32 feet to each 277 of mine. ... _if_ I did the maths right, of course.
@Robin0Blackett
@Robin0Blackett Жыл бұрын
My favorite quote about metric and imperial system goes like this: “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.”
@clear.5999
@clear.5999 Жыл бұрын
😂😂🤣👍
@kasper7574
@kasper7574 Жыл бұрын
How did your metric system save you during the War? Oh wait it didn't, America did...
@clear.5999
@clear.5999 Жыл бұрын
@@kasper7574 if you look in the books, you'll realise that it was actually the US government that started and orchestrated WW2... read up on "The Horrors" by Oswen Wilde, 1948... he died 1 month after publishing the book...
@bryan6870
@bryan6870 Жыл бұрын
Millilitre*
@olsirmonkey
@olsirmonkey Жыл бұрын
@@clear.5999 yeah sure...
@demetriosb5758
@demetriosb5758 2 жыл бұрын
Just a note, a nautical mile has nothing to do with a typical mile. A nautical mile is the median arc length corresponding to one minute of latitude. Or 1/60th of a degree of latitude
@serg9320
@serg9320 2 жыл бұрын
I never knew that, always thought it was just a strange subset. TIL.
@rauhamanilainen6271
@rauhamanilainen6271 2 жыл бұрын
And a knot would be a nautical mile ("knot"-ical mile) per hour, or in other words an arcminute of latitude per hour.
@dinamosflams
@dinamosflams 2 жыл бұрын
@@rauhamanilainen6271 it used to be the distance between knots in a standard rope divided by the time it took the rope to get out of the ship when it was stuck by an ancor, I think
@vidiot5533
@vidiot5533 2 жыл бұрын
This highlights the point even further that imperial units were better at being subdivided, when there's a system of measurement that can be divided by 1, 2 ,3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, and 10, not once, but twice (poor 7 lol)
@CristiNeagu
@CristiNeagu 2 жыл бұрын
​@@dinamosflams Not quite. First off, in the good ol' days of sailing, they used to use a chip log (a flat board that would catch the water and would thus be stationary in the water) to measure speed. As the boat was moving, they would throw this over board, and then they would let the rope slip out and they would count knots set in the rope. The unit of "knot" does get its name from these knots, but the knots were set at precisely the distance required so they would translate directly into nautical miles per hour.
@LMB222
@LMB222 Жыл бұрын
You know why the French adopted the metric system? (They didn't invent all of it) It's because they had over 400 sets of definitions of weights and measures. There was Parisian pound and lyonnaise pound, this foot and that foot and yet another 399 feet definitions. Each town had one. Same of course for ounces, inches and so on. So instead of trying to unify all that, they cut the Gordian knot and got rid of all of it.
@jmurray1110
@jmurray1110 Жыл бұрын
I think the British did just something similar their imperial system when they got rid of their Winchester system
@elplaceholder
@elplaceholder Жыл бұрын
@@jmurray1110 you again? Lol
@ernielever8754
@ernielever8754 Жыл бұрын
As a french person I agree
@gamermapper
@gamermapper Жыл бұрын
And plus the entire world adopted these measurements because it was way more practical than converting between different units in each country. And that's the main advantage of the metric system, that it's universal and makes people not use conversions. Not just that it's more logical. That's what Americans don't understand, it was impractical to convert between a thousands different units so everyone switched to the universal standard. Everyone except them which still hold on to their outdated legacy units.
@catfacecat.
@catfacecat. Жыл бұрын
Wait what they did invent it And they were the first to fully adopt it
@arnauadell4824
@arnauadell4824 Жыл бұрын
In catalan, we have an unofficial unit of measurement called a "hand" ("pam"), which was used quite often at least by our grandparents' generation. A hand is commonly defined as 20cm, but the truth is that people just measured things with THEIR hands and got a number out of them. So if your grandma says that the table is "7 hands long", you actually have to take into account the size of her hand. What she's actually saying is "this table is 7 grandma hands long". Essentially everyone had their own unique unit of measurement, in a very toki pona-like manner. Of course we use metric when any semblance of precision is required, but it isn't uncommon to say things like "he's two hands taller than me". There were also a lot of people who knew the exact conversion between their hand length and metric, and could get scarily accurate measurements of things just by sizing them up with their hands.
@Ninjat126
@Ninjat126 Жыл бұрын
For day-to-day measurement, this sort of thing just isn't an issue. "Three by three feet of cloth" is pretty straightforward to visually understand, especially when you can SEE that the other guy's feet are smaller than yours and they're counting by THEIR feet, not yours. You can (theoretically) do precision engineering and architecture with "arbitrary" measurements like this, as long as everyone on the team can check each-other's work. Big-Feet Tim can SEE he's got big feet, and ask Normal-Feet Nathan to help him measure. If you're working alone then you don't even need that. As distances get bigger, that's when these systems of measurement break down. If you're sending goods or information a week down-river, how will those recipients know how big YOUR feet are? Do you send one of your shoes with the package? Extend the differences further and things become hopeless. Now you're far enough away that even broad generalisations like "apple-sized" or "horse-sized" might not apply, because this region has different horses and different apples. That's assuming everyone's working in good faith, and you won't want to do that after the first time you buy "ten stones weight" of goods and discover that bastard was measuring with pumice.
@2adamast
@2adamast 11 ай бұрын
@@Ninjat126 because your feet are 12 inch long? (us size 12 and 13 for women) My guess is that you just don't care
@fireyfan25
@fireyfan25 10 ай бұрын
[insert Robot Wars joke involving Panic Attack here]
@juxx9628
@juxx9628 10 ай бұрын
Here in Colombia (At least in the Caribbean) it is common to do that also! Just that a bit different... We use fingers: We measure things sometimes by putting our hand horizontally and counting how many fingers (Except thumbs) fits on the object's length. Maybe we use another thing to measure, like our foot or anything that's useful to see. Obviously, this is NOT used when precission is required. This is just a "handy" way to measure things, since it's a bit more visual than saying "about 6 cm". By the way, don't know why I'm writing this in English since we both speak Spanish (Probably).
@jordicorfont
@jordicorfont 7 ай бұрын
No ve d'un pam nananana si esta fresca i eixerida no ve no ve no ve d'un pam
@nathangamble125
@nathangamble125 Жыл бұрын
Barleycorns *are* still used, we just don't call them barleycorns any more. They're used to measure shoe sizes.
@Probba
@Probba 2 жыл бұрын
Metric would be vastly improved if it were base-10 instead of base-10.
@yoavboaz1078
@yoavboaz1078 2 жыл бұрын
Nah base-10 is way better
@neonbunnies9596
@neonbunnies9596 2 жыл бұрын
@@yoavboaz1078 fool, base-10 is the best, and way better than base-10
@felipevasconcelos6736
@felipevasconcelos6736 2 жыл бұрын
I prefer base 6. I mean bijective seximal, of course.
@ssnsfronunder8234
@ssnsfronunder8234 2 жыл бұрын
@@felipevasconcelos6736 haha sex
@PlatinumAltaria
@PlatinumAltaria 2 жыл бұрын
We should use base-17 because the extreme inconvenience will make everyone work slower and therefore more carefully.
@Crissov
@Crissov 2 жыл бұрын
Creator of “the chart” here; I never intended it to illustrate how ridiculous a system the English (length) units are, because I agree with your point: there is no actual system at all! When I made the graph, I did so to get a better overview of historic and accidental relationships myself. The 6000 ≠ 6080 paths are in there deliberately, for instance, because those are two alternate definitions that have been used. The sibling weight chart has more of such cases. By the way, did you publish your NIST chart to Wikicommons as well? It’s a nice and welcome addition.
@marzipancutter8144
@marzipancutter8144 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for making it! It's really helping me out. Looking at it gives me a way more intuitive understanding of measures that I'm not familiar with, rather than having to pull out a calculator every time.
@krugerofcause9048
@krugerofcause9048 2 жыл бұрын
Yo. Cool.:)
@HBMmaster
@HBMmaster 2 жыл бұрын
good idea! I've uploaded my chart there now. [ commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:NIST_definitions_of_American_units_of_length.png ] I hope it can be of use to someone down the line!
@StuffandThings_
@StuffandThings_ 2 жыл бұрын
Just goes to show how intentions are often lost over time, and especially on the internet. Kinda like with all these units nobody uses anymore.
@Liggliluff
@Liggliluff 2 жыл бұрын
@@HBMmaster Thanks, but I do suggest inverting the colours, since graphs on Wikipedia are black on white.
@river446
@river446 5 ай бұрын
I'd like to add that I really appreciate how the Imperial system of lengths works for sewing, as someone who does a lot of that. Yes, the metric system is easier to multiply by 10, but you are not multiplying by 10 when sewing. You are dividing, specifically by two more than once, which gets Real ugly with 10, but is very nice with 36 and 12 and fractions of an inch! I like being able to divide inches when doing seams instead of having to work in arbitrary numbers of millimeters (too precise), or numbers of centimeters (not precise enough). like you got 1" 5/8" 1/2" 3/8" 1/4" 1/8". very directly related to each other. all the precision you need. easy to remember. Also easy to standardize for different "types" of things you're sewing: clothes are 5/8" or 1/2" seam, accessories like purses are 1/2" or 3/8", quilts are 1/4", and French seams are 1/8". You can remember that and use it when you don't have a pattern to work directly off of. Yards and fractional yards are also really convenient to work off of when buying fabric: inches turn into fractional yards really really nicely. You can take a 5'4'' measurement for a cloak, which is 64'' just by remembering the multiples of 12 (remember your times tables? i learned those in 3rd grade), which is 1 and 2/3 yards! Very easy to remember and go to the fabric store and buy the right amount of fabric (though i would round it up to 1 3/4 yards just to be safe). I dunno. I think that being able to use a system that's really well optimized for some things is better than having to use something that's optimized for something else just to appease some nonexistent god of Consistency and Objectivity. Sure, the metric system is absolutely better for scientific measurements, but it is foolish to say that we are purely scientific beings. We are humans who have feet and digits and for the vast majority of our existence had no decimal system, no calculators, no easily accessible paper and pencil, and no idea what "universal constants" were, and the Imperial system shows that. In addition to all the completely valid reasons not to like the Imperial system, perhaps that is one reason people don't like it. But then again, who knows- I'm just a random person in the comments section of a KZbin video.
@cjuice9039
@cjuice9039 Жыл бұрын
In a surveying class I took for my Civil Engineering degree we had to learn all sorts of obsolete units of distance measurements "just in case". I never did any surveying outside of that class but from what I learned surveyors need to know these units because they might come across a measurement that was recorded in older units.
@2adamast
@2adamast 11 ай бұрын
Depending of the state surveying in the US has metric, international inch(1961) or customary inch (18xx)
@SirHarryDave
@SirHarryDave 2 жыл бұрын
I think an interesting quirk about Americans and the imperial system is how we don’t actually use miles to measure distance all that often, we use time! This is because the average highway speed limit in the US is generally around 60 miles per hour, or a mile a minute, making conversion really easy. So while the distance between NYC and Chicago is 790 miles, it’s more practical to say it’s a 12.5 hour drive
@melvinshaw7574
@melvinshaw7574 2 жыл бұрын
I never noticed that before, but you're definitely right, at least in comparison to how I personally conceptualize distance. It certainly seems as though most people are more comfortable referring to a trip as "two hours away", rather than "120 miles". I suppose looking at distance relative to time does somewhat bring it back into "human useable" terms. I have no idea what two hundred miles looks like but if I said it takes about 3.5 hours to drive, I would have a somewhat more grounded concept of the distance. I wonder if this mentality is a vestige of when people used to refer to places as "three days" or "a fortnight" away.
@__nog642
@__nog642 2 жыл бұрын
That really isn't a measure of distance unless you're talking about two points on a highway though. People use time just as often to talk about time between places within a single city, except the average speed there is definitely not 60 mph.
@ghotay3
@ghotay3 2 жыл бұрын
In my experience Americans are actually much more likely to describe the distance between two places in miles compared to Brits. And that's actually completely independent of highway speeds. I would say something like "Well it's not very far but it's country roads, so takes about an hour". I have *no idea* of the miles, only the time. (Oddly this only applies to driving. I know the distance when I'm walking, but if you're moving under your own power you 'feel' the miles in a completely different way)
@appa609
@appa609 2 жыл бұрын
I hate this
@ovencake523
@ovencake523 2 жыл бұрын
never thought of it but its actually pretty efficient
@ohno5559
@ohno5559 2 жыл бұрын
I think this is an instance of a larger problem where people conflate "the difference between X and Y is extremely obvious" and "the difference between X and Y is extremely large"
@linkhidalgogato
@linkhidalgogato 2 жыл бұрын
i think the difference is extremely large imperial sucks
@mutantcube1737
@mutantcube1737 2 жыл бұрын
@@linkhidalgogato what makes you say it sucks? So long as people clearly understand what is being represented by a measurement its working fine
@linkhidalgogato
@linkhidalgogato 2 жыл бұрын
@@mutantcube1737 i mean if ur bar is set that low then yeah i guess even the imperial system would meet your standards
@tissuepaper9962
@tissuepaper9962 2 жыл бұрын
@@linkhidalgogato wdym man? All units are arbitrarily defined based on their context of use. Metric was defined for the lab, customary units were defined based on quantities people regularly use in daily life. Don't forget why we want standardized units in the first place, it's all about making it easier to share information. That's really the only criterion for a successful system of measurements.
@linkhidalgogato
@linkhidalgogato 2 жыл бұрын
@@tissuepaper9962 metric wasn't design for the lab it was design to be easier to use and it is its not just about having standard units its about having sensible and easy to use units
@amandajones8841
@amandajones8841 Жыл бұрын
The fathom, 6 feet, is based on the approximate average male arm span. This is useful when measuring the depth of water with a rope with a weight on the end, pulling it up hand over hand. I delight in this.
@ryker_azareth
@ryker_azareth Жыл бұрын
6:08 I think this is the whole crux of why users of either system have trouble understanding or adapting to the other one. Users of the imperial system avoid conversion, work around it or prefer to work by halving their measuments leading to fractions such as 1/16 or 1/32 while the metric system outright depends on the conversion for it to work. When a metric user has to get a quarter of a meter they commonly "convert", or more accurately change, the scale of their unit to centimeters to get 25cm instead of 0.25m. When the number starts to get inconvenient for daily use, metric users just dynamically switch the scale which is likely a foreign way of thinking for imperial users. On top of that, the concept of working by halving isn't really a common way to work in the metric system which might be awkward for people who are used to that method. The two systems are almost polar opposites in their everyday use which makes grasping the other side's view hard. They utilise different methods. You can't use the metric system like you'd use the imperial one and vice versa. If you treat the suffixes of the metric system as their own independent units you're immediately doing it wrong just if you'd try to mix and match feet and miles in the imperial system. You can't just switch the units without also switching the way you use the units.
@hodb3906
@hodb3906 Жыл бұрын
We work similarly to a certain degree. We say half liters and not 50cl. Or half a meter and not 50 cm. In fact if we wanted to be more accurate we would say 1 cubic decimeter and not 1 liter. But yeah. You are right that we easily change scientific prefixes depending on the convenience. 20 cm instead of 0.2 meters. 2 kilometers instead of 2000 meters since we are taught that since primary school. Very good observation.
@abonynge
@abonynge Жыл бұрын
@@hodb3906 The funny thing is that in American schools we are now taught all kinds of history and reason the metric system is better, but we aren't actually taught nearly as much about the imperial system our lives are dependent on. Current curriculums are clearly biased to make the younger generations want the metric system instead of the imperial system. But it just makes our lives more difficult. Why do I need to know how a meter was defined, but not taught how a mile was defined? We might be taught that a mile is a Roman mile, maybe even that a Roman Mile was 1000 paces as mentioned in this video. But what is a pace? Is it arbitrary based on how long your legs are? Is it counted by each foot hitting the ground? No. A Roman Pace was a standardized measurement. Counted on the left foot hitting the ground, at infantry marching speed. Meaning that while in formation marching, every 1000 times your left foot hit the ground, you traveled 1 Roman mile with very little inconsistency. The entire system was based around the practicality of being able to measure without tools. Also the term "milestone" comes from the fact that on Roman paved roads they placed a particular stone at 1 mile intervals. On each of these stones was a number indicating how far from Rome you were. This is also where we get the idiom "all roads lead to Rome" as all paved roads in fact did lead to Rome.
@harmless6813
@harmless6813 Жыл бұрын
@@abonynge As far as I know all US customary units are based on SI (metrical) units (and have been for decades). So why should it matter how they were defined in the distant past?
@EskChan19
@EskChan19 Жыл бұрын
@@abonynge So you're complaining that the school system is trying to teach you the better system, and explain to you why it's better, instead of teaching you the stupid system that literally only still exists because americans can't admit that something they do isn't perfect?
@abonynge
@abonynge Жыл бұрын
@@harmless6813 The same reason the way the metric system was previously defined matters. It is no longer measured by things like the circumference of the Earth. But we are still taught that because it helps people understand the basis of the measurement system. With metric it actually matters less than it does with imperial. With the imperial system most measurements are anthropic, meaning you can use your body parts to get a rough estimate. The inch is around the width of the average male thumb. In many languages the word for inch is still the same as the word for thumb. The foot was initially the measure of the average male's shoed foot. Materials to make shoes have improved so they are thinner than in the past, its roughly equivalent to a size 14 US sneaker. You are supposed to be able to get an estimate of feet by walking heel to toe in shoes. The list goes on, but knowing these things does find use in every day life for many people.
@Skip6235
@Skip6235 2 жыл бұрын
I’m an American who moved to Canada, and it is infuriating. Imperial for measuring short distances and heights, metric for long distance. Celsius for the weather, Fahrenheit for cooking (the exact OPPOSITE of what it should be!) At least in the US we just have one system for the most part!
@unarei
@unarei 2 жыл бұрын
seriously! celsius feels like it's practically designed for cooking but is more annoying for ambient temperatures. also they tried to migrate to imperial for short distances but really didn't do very well, the reason metric is used for long distances is because it was mandated to be used in cars and on road signs and stuff
@JoQeZzZ
@JoQeZzZ 2 жыл бұрын
I find the metric system to be superior in every way except fahrenheit/celsius. Most people use temperature for food or for inside/outside temperature and especially for the latter Celsius just is too coarse. Sure it's nice knowing that sub 0 is freezing, but if that's really the only problem I can live with switching. Centigrade and Fahrenheit are just as arbitrary as each other. We could easily replace Kelvin with Rankine in the SI too (not that we should replace anything in the SI)
@Unknownlight
@Unknownlight 2 жыл бұрын
Canada's measurement system is totally ruined by its physical proximity to the US. Why is weather measured in Celsius? Because the weather stations on local TV can freely use metric if they want, and so they do. Why is cooking measured in Fahrenheit? Because historically there wasn't a good financial reason for manufacturers to sell a different kind of oven for the Canadian market, so Canada got all the ovens with Fahrenheit.
@Kagomai15
@Kagomai15 2 жыл бұрын
@@Unknownlight I just came here to say that!
@talideon
@talideon 2 жыл бұрын
@@unarei Nah. Very straightforward, once you start thinking in increments of 5 rather than 10.
@appa609
@appa609 2 жыл бұрын
Nautical miles are actually a great unit for navigation. It's 1 arc minute of lattitude. You can go straight from nautical miles to latlong coordinates
@theobserver314
@theobserver314 2 жыл бұрын
"Ocean Miles."
@hyperball01
@hyperball01 2 жыл бұрын
And that's really useful! On sea. Not on ground.
@MirrorHall_Clay
@MirrorHall_Clay 2 жыл бұрын
@@hyperball01 Just like this video shows; the units themselves are only useful depending on context
@fastertove
@fastertove 2 жыл бұрын
Niche units are fine. The problem is when niche becomes mainstream - it might not be ideal :)
@oliviapg
@oliviapg 2 жыл бұрын
@@hyperball01 Nobody uses nautical miles on ground
@user-sw7im1lg4u
@user-sw7im1lg4u 11 ай бұрын
I know I'm a year late to this video, but in the meantime studying physics has made me gain an even grater appreciation of the metric system. The biggest problem with the imperial system is not conversion between different units of the same physical dimension (which I get that Americans don't do), but conversion between different dimensions. In the SI system of measurement, the unit of force is the Newton, which is defined based on the other base SI units as 1 N = 1 kg*m/s^2. Given this relation, it's really easy to derive a force from a mass and an acceleration, plus, even if you are given some measurements in a multiple of a specific unit (like being given a mass in grams instead of kg), it's easy enough to convert to their base units for your final calculation. This cannot be done easily in the imperial system, as, for example, the imperial unit of force most commonly used is the pound-force, lbf, where 1 lbf = 32.2 lbs*ft/s^2, so in any calculations involving force, mass and acceleration, you are required to convert your units. You might say that the imperial system also has the poundel, where 1 pdl = 1 lbs*ft/s^2, mimicking the relationship that exists in metric between the Newton and the base units, but, disregarding the fact that the poundel is not widely used, the unit of pressure is still the pound-per-square-inch, which refers to the pound-force, requiring you to do a conversion. Dimensional analysis is an incredibly useful tool in physics to see if you've messed up a calculation, and the metric system just makes it so much easier to do.
@ohno5559
@ohno5559 9 ай бұрын
I agree but also all the really good physics has no units at all
@laughingjack85
@laughingjack85 8 ай бұрын
.....People are not rocket scientists. You'll probably find more construction workers and regular people then people who spend their life studying advanced mathematics, science and physics.
@tacticaloof6407
@tacticaloof6407 7 ай бұрын
At the same time, in engineering it is indescribably convenient to have your unit of force be the same quantity as your unit of mass times the acceleration of gravity which is something that gets lost a lot: metric is a system created in a vacuum where as imperial is a system created in practicality
@dalmationblack
@dalmationblack 7 ай бұрын
more commonly i think i see the imperial system being made coherent the other way around, keeping the lbf as the unit of force and instead defining the unit of mass as 1 slug = 1lbf / (1ft/s^2)
@Djiehh
@Djiehh Жыл бұрын
Numberphile once did a video on why a system with 12 digits would be superior to our system with ten, it boils down to the same advantage you mention for the imperial system: 12 can be divided by 2, 3, 4 and 6, while 10 can only be divided by 2 and 5, making it much more useful for intuitive divisions.
@Xnoob545
@Xnoob545 Жыл бұрын
Watch "a better way to count" by jan Misali
@Jake007123
@Jake007123 Жыл бұрын
10 is just more intuitive for humans though. We start counting by using our fingers and we generally have 10 of those. Once that is in place, it makes more sense to make our systems based on the number 10.
@NotFine
@NotFine Жыл бұрын
@@Jake007123 I feel like 12 isn’t so unintuitive A dozen is a pretty nice unit if I do say so myself
@Jake007123
@Jake007123 Жыл бұрын
@@NotFine My point was more about how very intuitive the number 10 is, more than 12. Twelve is a good number too, it's just that ten is much better.
@hannankruger4315
@hannankruger4315 Жыл бұрын
@@Jake007123 The only reason you find 10 more intuitive is because your entire life you grew up with a number system that is base 10, so your brain thinks im base 10. There are tons of number systems that have existed, and still exist around the would that don't use 10 as their base for continuing
@GingerGames
@GingerGames 2 жыл бұрын
For people who want to know why there are 5280 feet or 1760 yards in a mile, it is because of a compromise, and standardization from around 13th century England. Official unit systems historically were always a _legal_ standardization of what people were using and came up with themselves (evolutionary developed, not designed) that they found useful. So when the first English standardization happened, they had to settle on the definition of the English foot, which they defined in relation to the (legacy) Saxon foot. The English foot was defined to be 10/11 of the Saxon foot. But this then meant that the new hypothetical English mile would be 10/11 of the old amount, and the cost of changing all the road signs (yes, even back then) would be too much. The original Saxon mile was defined as 1600 Saxon yards or 4800 Saxon feet (why this was chosen requires a little more of a history lesson). So instead of changing all the road signs and maps etc, they just changed the definition of the mile to be 11/10 (10%) larger, and that's where the 1760 (1600 + 160) yards and 5280 (4800 + 480) feet comes from for the definition of a mile.
@iamthinking2252_
@iamthinking2252_ 2 жыл бұрын
Oh, I thought the 1760 number just came about from units in between feet, yards and miles that had smaller numbers (eg IDK… 28) that were forgotten - eg furlongs?
@no-man_baugh
@no-man_baugh 2 жыл бұрын
You telling me that the metric system is the single most successful conlang ever conceived?
@danielbishop1863
@danielbishop1863 2 жыл бұрын
@@iamthinking2252_ : When the English mile was standardized, it was set to be a whole number (8) of furlongs (660 feet), because the furlong was a well-established unit, and nobody wanted to screw up all the existing property records that measured land in furlongs. A furlong is "a furrow long", i.e., the length of a trench made by a plow in a farm field. Because there's only so much distance a farmer could plow before he had to rest his oxen. The furlong was ultimately standardized at 10 chains, or 40 rods. A "rod" is 16.5 feet. This makes no sense with the modern foot, but in old Saxon units it was a nice round 15 feet.
@jakezepeda1267
@jakezepeda1267 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting. Thank you.
@GingerGames
@GingerGames 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielbishop1863 you've got it backwards. A furlong was 600 saxon feet, therefore it would become 600+60 English feet. And then a furlong was still 1/8 of a mile.
@olgierdvoneverec4135
@olgierdvoneverec4135 2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, while we don't have a 30 cm lenght unit, most of us who grew in metric countries can probably visualize that lenght without subdividing the meter because the rulers you use in school are exacly 30cm long, i'm guessing people who grew up in imperial countries had the full foot? Also we do say 30cm, no one uses decimeters, or decameters or hectometers. Much like miles and feet we almost never convert opting instead to use decimal point to increase precision at first.
@qwertyTRiG
@qwertyTRiG 2 жыл бұрын
Here in Ireland metal rulers are usually metric (30cm) and wooden ones are almost always metric on one side and imperial on the other. Tape measures are sometimes metric and more commonly both.
@soni3608
@soni3608 2 жыл бұрын
in the US, our school rulers have both metric and empirical on em and are generally only a foot/~30cms long lol
@arvid3734
@arvid3734 2 жыл бұрын
well decimeters are used in sweden semi frequently...
@cabbageman
@cabbageman 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking, although I would say metric prefixes always refer to a multiple of 1000 (eg kilo, mega, giga, micro, nano ...) with the exception of centi. So we would say 900m not 0.9km and 8km not 8000m
@ember9361
@ember9361 2 жыл бұрын
Huh, is this why subway subs are either 30cm or 15cm long? Nice! 😊 It sounds better than imperial bc why would i want a foot 🦶🏼👣👞 in my sandwich ?? 🥪🤨📸
@CrankyKidneys
@CrankyKidneys Жыл бұрын
I’m a carpenter and something that is useful about imperial is that you can easily deal in thirds. It’s convenient and quick to measure out a third in imperial every standard measure is divisible by 3
@19mike88
@19mike88 11 ай бұрын
Ever heard of tenth?😂
@CrankyKidneys
@CrankyKidneys 11 ай бұрын
@@19mike88 ten is not divisible by 3. Can you explain what you mean?
@19mike88
@19mike88 11 ай бұрын
@SeaPrismUnderwear yeah, I meant that metric is divisible per 10. 10 decimeter is 1 millimiter, 10mm is 1 cm, 10 cm is 1 decameter... it's simpler and more accurate to divide per 10th than 3
@CrankyKidneys
@CrankyKidneys 11 ай бұрын
@@19mike88 yes that is simpler for sure, but my point is there are certain scenarios where you need to be dividing by 3 and an even division like 10 or 2 won’t work. Stuff like stud layouts, concrete forms, light fixtures across a ceiling, drywall cut outs. Having thirds makes all of these go smoother, a small advantage for the imperial system but an advantage none the less.
@19mike88
@19mike88 11 ай бұрын
@SeaPrismUnderwear mmm ok, but maybe those things are divisible per 3 because simply they were built using imperial.(i don't know the things you pointed out so i might be wrong)
@jacobclaassen6565
@jacobclaassen6565 Жыл бұрын
you forgot the football field (100 yards) which is used as a common intermediate step between feet/yards and miles
@jasonwiley798
@jasonwiley798 Жыл бұрын
And isn't a soccer(football) pitch measured in yds?
@oskarihonkasaari3215
@oskarihonkasaari3215 2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Having a separate unit for temperature is itself completely arbitrary. If you fix the Boltzmann constant as 1, you get temperature in terms of Joules. Some statistical physics books actually do this.
@Reydriel
@Reydriel 2 жыл бұрын
Doesn't the zeroth law of thermodynamics rely on/define temperature as an intrinsic parameter though? (or whatever it's called, my thermodynamics isn't very good)
@blank4305
@blank4305 2 жыл бұрын
But units are good! You don't want to measure temperatures in Joules, or distance in seconds (if you set the speed of light as 1), because then you lose the ability to check that your computation gets you something with the right units. That is, unless you're some weird theoretical physicist.
@tissuepaper9962
@tissuepaper9962 2 жыл бұрын
@@blank4305 all of those units are still ultimately defined based on c though. I don't really see the difference TBH.
@RhoFGC
@RhoFGC 2 жыл бұрын
@@blank4305 You can get back the units in SI/CGS for every result you get by inserting whatever combination of c, hbar, kb and G you need to get them. For example, in c=G=1 units the Schwarzschild radius of an object of mass M is R = 2M. However, you know you want R in meters and M in kg, so R = (G/c^2) * 2M is your ticket.
@iamthinking2252_
@iamthinking2252_ 2 жыл бұрын
Wait so what would a 20°C day be in Joules?
@Random3716
@Random3716 2 жыл бұрын
A note on cables and fathoms: These are units designed to measure rope for fitting out a sailing ship and for sailing the ship with a crew who mostly have little-to-no formal education outside of practical matters related to their profession. A fathom originated as the distance between your hands when outstreched. If you've ever coiled rope you'll know that stretching your arms out and then brighing them back in while holding the rope is a very neat and efficient way of making a coil or taking a measure of said rope. Given the average dimensions of a human, this figure comes out to around 6 feet, but historically standards varied by as much as a foot in either direction. Depending on where and when you are this may have been as short as 5.5 feet or as much as 7 feet, but given time and practice (both in abundance at sea) your common sailor would be able to work out about how much slack to give or take to come close enough to the standard at the time for most purposes, and anything that requires precision such as water depth or speed would be measured with a pre-marked line. A cable length is originates as literally the length of the ship's anchor cable. Again exactly how many fathoms of cable you would need for this and how long a fathom is varied with time and place, which is why this unit doesn't fit well into most versions of "the chart". If you were to ask the United States Navy, they will tell you that a cable is 120 fathoms. In the Royal Navy a cable is 101 fathoms. In practice, this discrepancy doesn't really matter. In short, like the rest of the "imperial system" these units have a specific application, work intuitively within that application and were never intended to be used for much else.
@theobserver314
@theobserver314 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, this seems.... "unfathomable."
@dannypipewrench533
@dannypipewrench533 2 жыл бұрын
I use fathoms in every day life, and I am not a sailor. No special reason, fathoms are a good unit.
@Illlium
@Illlium Жыл бұрын
So these units are basically "whatever, we'll fix it in post". Makes sense.
@crazycatlover1885
@crazycatlover1885 Жыл бұрын
I find it interesting that in England, we use metric almost entirely but most people will use the imperial system when measuring height or weight of a person and we tend to measure speed and lomg distances in miles/mph. I don't know how common this is, but my family also prefers to bake in ounces.
@ichigo_nyanko
@ichigo_nyanko Жыл бұрын
Baking in ounces isn't very common these days, especially for younger people. But measuring jugs and spoons generally have both, but the spoons are indexed to metric (i.e. you will have a 10ml spoon and not a 2 tbsp spoon)
@richardbloemenkamp8532
@richardbloemenkamp8532 11 ай бұрын
The word "mile" sounds a lot better than "kilometers". Kilometer sounds cold and artificial and the pronunciation does flow like mile does.
@setlerking
@setlerking 9 ай бұрын
@@richardbloemenkamp8532in Sweden we have metric miles (10 km)
@martillito_
@martillito_ 7 ай бұрын
@@richardbloemenkamp8532define artificial in this context
@FinnishArsonist
@FinnishArsonist 3 ай бұрын
Interesting - in Canada we use km/h, but we have the same issue for cooking (even worse, our ovens are in F, outside temp in C.) And height (I know my height in imperial, don't know it in metric. And I literally CANNOT picture what someone's height is in imperial, but I can if someoene gives it to me in cm.)
@the_vine_queen
@the_vine_queen Жыл бұрын
Thank you, this was actually very informative! As an engineer I have a mixed relationship with whether the US should switch or not. Switching would make it consistent with the rest of the world and make measuring things a lot nicer (for instance, I'm taking thermodynamics and 1 Pascal is defined as 1N/m^2, which is very helpful for keeping track of units). However, the process of switching would be pretty painful for those already attuned to using imperial. It would take me a while to understand how far a km is or how hot a degree celsius is in day-to-day life. Basically, I wish we would have switched to metric when the rest of the world did.
@PROPAROXITONO
@PROPAROXITONO Жыл бұрын
you know that metric is not that old, and at one point in the 20th century, the whole world passed to this process of switching, right? like, THE WHOLE WORLD MADE THIS EFFORT TO HAVE JUST ONE SYSTEM OF MEASUREMENT IN THE ENTIRE WORLD, and just americans were like "yeah, but no". and to me, this would be fine if the USA didn't export products around the world. So I have to buy a TV that is 55 inches, a cellphone that is 5,5 inches... Some products have 5 oz. I don't even know how to translate oz to portuguese. I don't know if this is a word or an abbreviation. I don't want to know because my country made the effort to switch at one point in time. people complained people weren't used to the new way, and things get confusing, but in a short time everyone knew how to use metrics and we just forgot about the other methods. but them we buy something from the USA and nothing makes sense anymore.
@djshado
@djshado Жыл бұрын
@Edson Vinícius Santos Vaz Ronque so if you're getting products from the US with Oz on it, it also has the metric equivalent posted on the product. Everything in my kitchen with an imperial unit on it has the metric listed as well. So there is no way you're confused by a product you got from the US. Also not knowing how big a 55" TV is is pretty unimportant.
@MTM358
@MTM358 10 ай бұрын
It would also be incredibly EXPENSIVE. Just imagine how many hundreds of thousands of road signs would need to be changed or reprogrammed in metric. Speedometers in the US read primarily in MPH (analogue dials sometimes have smaller KmH denotation, but often digital gauges only read MPH, cars might require software upgrades). Food packaging would have to change where it's not already in liters or grams (yes Americans use those in grocery stores sometimes-in fact our nutritional labels are in metric). That's ignoring public resistance to changing the way they go about their daily lives!
@KerbalRocketry
@KerbalRocketry 2 жыл бұрын
the ending made me laugh, tho never actually encountered anybody who uses a hundredweight. stones tho, yeahhhh not sure why Imperial stuck around for peoples weights
@Rack979
@Rack979 2 жыл бұрын
Old English anvils are weighed in hundredweights, AKA 8 stone. And quarters, a quarter of a hundredweight, are just 2 stone. 1·1·1 would be 112 + 28 + 1 or 141 pounds.
@Rack979
@Rack979 2 жыл бұрын
Also, from the comments, English church bells.
@DocWorm
@DocWorm 2 жыл бұрын
@@Rack979 that really doesn't explain it though. Two extremely specialized craftsmen professions using a specialized unit of measurement doesn't explain why it continues to he in common use, especially not after Jan went over surveyor units and how 99.99% of Americans dont even know about them let alone use them.
@KerbalRocketry
@KerbalRocketry 2 жыл бұрын
​@@DocWorm it's not in common use is the thing, saying that a hundredweight is used in britain is doing the same slight of hand as the chart does by presenting something used for specialisms as if that's the same thing as "common use". like if it was in common use this wouldn't be the first context i'd actually hear it defined and mentioned as if it's not some oddity
@TheEnderLeader1
@TheEnderLeader1 2 жыл бұрын
As a British person, I have absolutely no idea what a stone is
@hipsterjustice
@hipsterjustice 2 жыл бұрын
one thing that i think is important to understand about the imperial measurement system ( as it exists in the US ) is that a lot of these convoluted and meaningless relationships were inexpicably things you were meant to learn in school ( in particular the mile/foot thing ) - which ends up making them reviled by young adults
@tafazziReadChannelDescription
@tafazziReadChannelDescription 2 жыл бұрын
not reviled enough apparently
@TheWrathAbove
@TheWrathAbove 2 жыл бұрын
It's especially bad in Canada where you're often forced to learn the conversions between Imperial and Metric on top of that.
@arrsea7947
@arrsea7947 2 жыл бұрын
the problem is there are people who actually defend the imperial system and this guy singlehandedlg bogged down efforfs to replace the imperial system as a "joke". As someone who has majored in sociology and the studies of political activism online, and having been features on the news many times, people do not believe me that when they make controversial videos as a "joke", they are actually ignorant to the fact that the idea isnt as controversial as the idea theyre attacking
@shieldgenerator7
@shieldgenerator7 2 жыл бұрын
that's what happens when you value "rigor" over usefulness
@ZMacGregor
@ZMacGregor 2 жыл бұрын
They taught me standard better than they taught me metric, and at a younger age too. USA be wack.
@Crazy_Diamond_75
@Crazy_Diamond_75 Жыл бұрын
I'm an engineer in America, and one of the great pains in my life is dealing with converting between energy and power units in my job. In college we're taught both metric and imperial together, and in that context, it becomes excruciatingly clear how awful and mish-mashed the imperial "system" truly is. I agree it's not quite as bad as some of its detractors who've never used it say, but in a technical environment, it is just awful. One of the worst things is that we measure all our electricity in Watts, but we measure thermal power for things like heat pumps, air conditioning, and water heaters in BTUs (technically, the analog would be BTU/h, but I'll just use BTU for short). Problem is, all these BTU-based thermal devices are often _powered_ by electricity, _and_ we have natural gas power plants (and the energy density of NG is measured in BTUs) _generating_ Watt-based electricity, so we are converting between the two units constantly. BTUs are the most arcane bullshit unit ever conjured, and they're not consistent from medium to medium or even temperature to temperature. It's like if you took a Calorie and put two big question marks at the end of it. The whole thing is a mess and it's about time they just scrapped everything and converted to SI. I sooooo miss dealing with shit like Joules, where the conversion to Watts is literally just to divide by time in seconds. Why can't we have nice things?!
@DerekMoore82
@DerekMoore82 Жыл бұрын
My actual foot is literally the same size as the unit of measurement known as a "foot" so it comes in handy because I can measure things with my body.
@jasonwiley798
@jasonwiley798 Жыл бұрын
We need to get time on the metric system, and get rid of timezones
@richardbloemenkamp8532
@richardbloemenkamp8532 11 ай бұрын
@@chillyavian7718 True but we could easily use one universal time. Only in China they would sleep from 18:00 to 02:00 and work from 2:00 to 10:00 while in the US they would sleep from 06:00 to 14:00 and work from 14:00 to 22:00.
@aphraxiaojun1145
@aphraxiaojun1145 10 ай бұрын
@@richardbloemenkamp8532 UTC exists?
@KerbalLauncher
@KerbalLauncher 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting quirk. There are ALMOST exactly 1550 square inches in a square meter, it's actually suspiciously close to being an integer, to 3 decimal points.
@danielbishop1863
@danielbishop1863 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I just did the math: 1550.0031000062
@andrewhawkins6754
@andrewhawkins6754 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielbishop1863 Would what follows be ...00000093 or 0000000124?
@rauhamanilainen6271
@rauhamanilainen6271 2 жыл бұрын
@@andrewhawkins6754 Come to think of it, now that you point that out, I'm wondering if it's just a coincidence or if the pattern actually continues. 155, 310, 620, ...
@rauhamanilainen6271
@rauhamanilainen6271 2 жыл бұрын
@@andrewhawkins6754 Not a coincidence it seems. The value in every group of 6 digits really doubles throughout the decimal expansion (overlaps due to carrying obscure this relationship past 90 decimal places). So 000015.5, 000031, 000062, 000124, 000248, 000496, and so on. 1550.0031000062000124000248000496000992001984003968007936015872031744063488126976253952... Why this happens definitely has to do with the factors of 2.54^2, but I'm not really sure which ones and how exactly. An infinite geometric series, maybe?
@Pietro-qz5tm
@Pietro-qz5tm 2 жыл бұрын
Math graduated student here. It's most likely because a power of 10 is very near to a multiple of 254*254 = 64516 = (2*127)^2. Powers of 10 from 100 onwards have gcd 4 with 64516 so that is the minimal distance between their multiples but that could be achieved only by multiples of powers of 10 with coefficient different from 1 (does it?). Out of curiosity I just wrote a program to calculate Bézout coefficients using Euclidean algorithm and found out that indeed 64516*15500031 is 999999999996
@david_porthouse
@david_porthouse Жыл бұрын
Remember the good old days when there were 12 pennies in a shilling, except in Jersey where there were 13 and the Isle of Man where there were 14, 20 shillings in a pound and 21 shillings in a guinea? The penny was divided into four farthings and the farthing was divided further into halves, or thirds in some colonies and quarters in others. Common coins were the farthing, the halfpenny, the penny, threepence, fourpence, sixpence, shilling, two shillings and two shillings and sixpence or half crown. I should have mentioned that five shillings were a crown, but crown coins were often only issued in coronation and jubilee years. We should go back to the old system after Brexit.
@1000eau
@1000eau Жыл бұрын
xD
@elplaceholder
@elplaceholder Жыл бұрын
Ah yes the old days where conversions were a nightmeare
@costakeith9048
@costakeith9048 Жыл бұрын
As an American, I was a bit envious of the superior British monetary system, at least until they needlessly desecrated it on the altar of decimalization. Still, sad to see it go, always sad to see something quirky and human be destroyed in the name of homogeneity and soulless standardization.
@wes4736
@wes4736 Жыл бұрын
I find it funny that so many people who make fun of the Americans for their out of place systems when most of the "Americanisms" were shared by the two until the 1970s and 80s. I guess it's because you don't really need to LEARN English living in the UK, it's the native language. Even silly things like calling football soccer (a distinction because we have our own football of course) when Soccer is still used in Canada and older football fans in Britain. I'm certainly glad we never had to deal with currency conversion for everyday transactions, though. I remember seeing the Pilot episode for Doctor Who where they talk about how in the future, the pound is put in terms of Decimals, which in real life, would have only been in 15 years but was unthinkable in 1963.
@JacksonBockus
@JacksonBockus Жыл бұрын
The guinea is hilarious to me. A unit of currency worth 5% more than a pound.
@markpullan3202
@markpullan3202 10 ай бұрын
Great video. I'm a UK-based Engineer and would never dream of measuring or calculating anything in Imperial units. But as you point out - Imperial units are innately intuitive and that makes them particularly suitable for estimation purposes. My main objection is the US pint being smaller than the UK pint, which means that a visit to the pub when stateside can be somewhat disappointing :)
@dampaul13
@dampaul13 6 ай бұрын
"Imperial units are innately intuitive" How? Why? For whom?
@m4rcyonstation93
@m4rcyonstation93 4 ай бұрын
​@@dampaul13 inches and feet being based on human ish scale is kind of ice tbh (I AM A METRIC USER)
@dottoysm
@dottoysm Жыл бұрын
It might also be worth pointing out that many countries (probably most countries) haven’t completely stopped using their old units. Countries like Australia and Canada still sometimes use imperial units. Japan has a set of units mainly related to housing area still in use. There is the Chinese pound. I’m sure there are more in other countries.
@termitreter6545
@termitreter6545 Жыл бұрын
Honestly thats the dumbest bit about the whole measure stuff. Everyone should just agree on one standard, not mix up different systems. That metric is better than imperial is just logical, considering imperial, like many other older systems (theres like a thousand definitions of a 'mile'), is a mess because it tried to bring many different types of measures together, and metric was later made as a logical standardization. Imperial isnt bad, just outdated, and keeping parts of it just causes problems.
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 Жыл бұрын
Where in Australia is the Imperial system used? The only time I ever see it is on really specific tools that have American origins. Things like router bits being defined as quarter or half inch shank (they also label the mm for those). But that is really really rare and really specific. All roads, buildings, construction, schools, speed zones, everything is in metric
@termitreter6545
@termitreter6545 Жыл бұрын
@@Nereosis16 Its usually some very niche applicatoins where imperial is still used. Its a bit overselling it to talk like those countries use both at the same time^^
@toomanymarys7355
@toomanymarys7355 Жыл бұрын
And India uses lakh and crore constantly....
@dampaul13
@dampaul13 Жыл бұрын
@@termitreter6545 "Countries like Australia...still sometimes use imperial units." "Its usually some very niche applicatoins where imperial is still used." Really? Such as? Individuals might. Specifc industries might, like when keeping a constant to align with international standards, ie.aviation using feet. But what are some examples of these "niche applicatoins" where the country of Australia use "imperial units?"
@android19willpwn
@android19willpwn 2 жыл бұрын
also the whole teaspoon->tablespoon->cup->pint->quart->gallon progression is essentially a microcosm of this, since with the exception of like quarts and gallons all those units are largely independent in usage. If something is measured in cups, you just say "two cups" instead of switching to pints. If something is measured in tablespoons, you would just say "four tablespoons" rather than a quarter-cup. It's a system which is good for cooking (what most people most commonly use volume measurements for), since it's easy to get an intuition for how much each individual unit is, and follow/adjust recipes based on that. Plus, a volume system based on powers of 2 is more easy for a person to approximate without measuring than one based on powers of 10, and a system based on pre-set values which you already have vessels for is quicker to use precisely than one which you measure with a scale. Not a super high *degree* of precision, but you don't need that in cooking. It does immediately fall apart if you try to use it in any other context, though.
@yaretziyanez4247
@yaretziyanez4247 2 жыл бұрын
i gonna have to dissagree on the independent thing. I work at a kitchen and we often are sharing our measuring cups and buckets, so it becomes really difficult when the recipe ask for 1 1/2 gallons of water and the only thing you have are in quarts.
@jmiquelmb
@jmiquelmb 2 жыл бұрын
You need precision for baking though, which is the branch of cooking that relies the most in measuring stuff. Besides, the fact that a tablespoon of brown sugar has a different weight than a tablespoon of white sugar is the most inconvenient thing ever. Maybe in 1840 it was useful, but modern people have digital scales. Having those different spoons to measure is proof that you need special tools to make imperial have any sense. It could be just as easy to have those spoons in metric: 5ml, 15 ml, and so on. But we normally don't have those because it's not necessary in my opinon.
@aliceiscalling
@aliceiscalling 2 жыл бұрын
@@jmiquelmb I'm genuinely curious, when has the weight of a tablespoon of brown sugar vs white sugar been a problem for you? I haven't come across a recipe that has that problem.
@jmiquelmb
@jmiquelmb 2 жыл бұрын
@@aliceiscalling When you want to change white sugar for brown sugar, or the opposite, since you want to keep weight, and tablespoons are a measure of volume. Same for castor sugar vs granulated sugar, and many other ingredients. Using volume to measure solids is incredibly cumbersome.
@aliceiscalling
@aliceiscalling 2 жыл бұрын
@@jmiquelmb Thank you! I'm the kind of person who doesn't switch out ingredients, so I never encountered that before.
@deedlefake
@deedlefake 2 жыл бұрын
You're actually wrong about barleycorn not being used. Kind of. While it's technically not really used directly by most people, it's actually the basis for American shoe sizes.
@hi-i-am-atan
@hi-i-am-atan 2 жыл бұрын
measuring soles with barleycorns sounds very painful
@rickpgriffin
@rickpgriffin 2 жыл бұрын
Ohhh, NOW it makes sense But as was said by a poster above, industries tend to make up their own units of measurement anyway. Like, "point" is an industry-specific term, made up because they needed something with that precise degree of fineness, and that scale, using whole integers (or close to) rather than decimals or fractions. Even if shoe sizes are technically in barelycorns, it's less that it's equal to barleycorn and more that it is "the shoe size unit"
@Salsmachev
@Salsmachev 2 жыл бұрын
Yay! I personally love the barleycorn. I'm glad to hear it's still used somewhere
@tissuepaper9962
@tissuepaper9962 2 жыл бұрын
So they aren't actually using the barleycorn then. I'm a size 13, and my foot is definitely not 4 and 1/3 inches long.
@rickpgriffin
@rickpgriffin 2 жыл бұрын
@@tissuepaper9962 It's more like barleycorn with the 0 placed at some size considered the minimum practical. Which is why it's different for men's, women's, and children's shoes
@vigilurbis3394
@vigilurbis3394 Жыл бұрын
In the Philippines we have become accustomed to utilizing both the SI and the US Imperial systems, partly as a result of past US rule in the country. The two systems are used side-by-side in everyday usage but for different applications. Even the spelling of SI units follow US English convention (e.g. "meter" instead of "metre") We weigh things like groceries, produce and construction materials in kilograms, but the weight of people is expressed in pounds. Similarly, people's heights are measured in feet and inches, but lengths of objects and distances are measured in meters and kilometers. We use the phrase "six-footer" (>183 cm) to describe someone taller-than-average, and we like to eat "quarter-pounder" (~113 g) burgers at fast food stores. We refill our drinking water by the gallon but gas by the liter.
@GhostofTradition
@GhostofTradition Жыл бұрын
this actually makes sense is is really in the spirit of the imperial system, just using measurements for specific things that makes sense
@vigilurbis3394
@vigilurbis3394 Жыл бұрын
@@GhostofTradition I think the US measurement system is better for more "casual" (i.e. non-scientific) applications or for measuring people, and metric for everything else. It's simply awkward and cumbersome to say something like a "one hundred eighty centimeter-er" instead of "six footer," for example, because one does not really need to be precise in referring to tall people. Other phrases and figures of speech such as "go the extra mile," "pound for pound," "the whole nine yards," convey their meaning much better as American units, without the need for people to consciously think of the metric equivalents to understand those phrases.
@elplaceholder
@elplaceholder Жыл бұрын
@@vigilurbis3394 we just say one eighty meters
@elplaceholder
@elplaceholder Жыл бұрын
Here in Chile we also have quarter pounds
@armandbiro2954
@armandbiro2954 10 ай бұрын
​@vigilurbis3394 No offense but the examples you gave aren't very strong, in my opinion. Those are all just sayings that include these measurements because of the US's historical ties to the imperial system. But that doesn't prove in any shape or form that it's better or it "makes more sense". Especially when you realise that there are other languages in the world that aren't english, so even though "one hundred and eighty centimeters" sounds clumsy and long, other languages might express the same thing shorter. Plus then there's how most everyday speech omits unnecessary parts (such as the "metre" postfix because "centi" by itself is enough, or sometimes even the whole thing goes out the window, making the speakers rely on context). With these two factors in mind, Spanish people clearly don't say "él mide ciento-ochenta centímetros", but "mide ciento-ochenta" or something, with the two o's bleeding into each other, further shortening the sentence when spoken. Or Hungarians don't say "száznyolcvan centiméter magas" ("he's a hundred and eighty centimetres tall"), but "száznyolcvanas" ("he's a hundred-eightier") or "egy-nyolcvan magas" ("he's one-eighty tall"). Bottom line is, whatever may sound bad in english doesn't necessarily sound bad in some other language. Plus, sayings are just... sayings. My native tongue is Hungarian and we have a bunch of sayings referring to times when people carved lines into wooden sticks to take note of sums of money but that doesn't mean we use/should use those.
@tasticfan4286
@tasticfan4286 Жыл бұрын
7:20 As a surveyor, this makes me so happy to finally have an answer to a question I never bothered to ask.
@jasonwiley798
@jasonwiley798 Жыл бұрын
What is the origin of a rod. They measure portages in rods for some reason
@tasticfan4286
@tasticfan4286 Жыл бұрын
​@jasonwiley798 I couldn't tell you the origin. However, it's just a unit of measurement in the same line as statute mile and chain. Supposedly the average canoe is 1 rod long. Call it a vestigial unit that still has some relevancy.
@TheOneMillionthRoger
@TheOneMillionthRoger 2 жыл бұрын
The way you constantly clarify how the metric system is still better has big "please don't hit me" energy
@proudamerican183
@proudamerican183 7 ай бұрын
He didn't want to get the Salem Witchhunt treatment. 😂
@leaffinite3828
@leaffinite3828 17 күн бұрын
Bcuz ppl online are still making comments that just say "metric better"
@amtm94
@amtm94 2 жыл бұрын
As a stormwater engineer, I find it necessary to point out that 1 ac-in/hr of rain is roughly equivalent to 1 ft^3/s. So if you know the watershed area in acres, and the average rainfall in inches/hour, both of which are common measurements for those things, you have found the flowrate in cubic feet per second and I think that's neat.
@danielbishop1863
@danielbishop1863 2 жыл бұрын
To be ultra-precise, an acre-inch is 3630 cubic feet. Since an hour is 3600 seconds, an acre-inch per hour is 1.008333... cubic feet per second.
@ericwolf9664
@ericwolf9664 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielbishop1863 the conversion is 1 within three sig figs so for most practical purposes yes he does know.
@theonly5001
@theonly5001 2 жыл бұрын
This works in Metric extremly well as well. Rainfall is given in mm/m² which is l/m². If you just add a time unit ontop you have your flowrate. This works great for scaling issues. Got a few km² of rainfall, just multiply the km² Number and add a factor of 10^6 and you got your complete Liters. If you want m³ then you just add 3 zeros or a factor of 10^3. That is what i like about the metric system. If just scales well.
@bootmii98
@bootmii98 2 жыл бұрын
43560:43200
@MattFyrm
@MattFyrm 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielbishop1863 yeah but in practical physics it usually doesn't matter to that degree of precision so it's ok xD
@itsdragoman
@itsdragoman Жыл бұрын
Telecom engineer here: I work for a Spanish company that once had a contract with Verizon to install some new antennas, they showed us the plan and the company started working on the data they had from Verizon. Me and my colleague (managing the config of the link) we looked at the plan and were baffled, they wrote numbers without metrics... Luckily Verizon wrote down the distance between Madrid and Toledo as '44', which is true in miles, but we both knew the 2 locations were about 70km away, on the radio configuration every millimeter counts so we halted the project ASAP to do recalculations, alot of money was lost..
@kazuyakenzaki1320
@kazuyakenzaki1320 Жыл бұрын
Were the recalculations the reason as to why funds were wasted?
@itsdragoman
@itsdragoman Жыл бұрын
@@kazuyakenzaki1320 exactly, since they had to build new towers, they leased the property and the construction process was already ongoing We had to relocate one of the towers and cancel the contract for one of the properties
@thomasdickson35
@thomasdickson35 Жыл бұрын
I'm a carpenter, not an engineer, so let's get that out of the way. I will say that although I'm an American, I have extensive experience with both the Imperial and Metric system of measurement. Not gonna lie, I like both. It's easier for me to guess and translate the length of something that's not, like hundreds of feet long (see what I did there?) in inches, rather than hundreds or thousands of millimeters. Most of my experience (which is A LOT) in mm's comes from using European machines, and I quite like them. However, if you really want to piss people off let's talk about using the cubit on a jobsite. It is effective.
@nom3nnescio
@nom3nnescio Жыл бұрын
But it's just plain stupidity to use "thousands of millimeters" use centimeters or even better meters.
@geraldozampieri3867
@geraldozampieri3867 Жыл бұрын
Right, but that argument doesnt make sense, as stated by the guy above, you never have to use hundreds of thousands of millimiters, or even thousands, OR EVEN HUNDREDs, there are new, completely equivalent, mesurements about every power of 10. You can just switch to centimeters, then meters, etc
@nom3nnescio
@nom3nnescio Жыл бұрын
@@geraldozampieri3867 thank you. The amount of stupidity in these comments from people using nonsense units is amusing
@NitroNinja324
@NitroNinja324 Жыл бұрын
​@@nom3nnescioYou sure got a lot of opinions for someone without a profile pic.
@nom3nnescio
@nom3nnescio Жыл бұрын
@@NitroNinja324 and you sure try to derail when you have nothing to say.
@wtrmute
@wtrmute 2 жыл бұрын
1:53 You would be surprised to find out that the definition of a mile was, in fact, 5,000 feet up until the 1593 "Weights and Measures Act" when it changed to 5,280 feet so the eighth-of-a-mile stade could become identical to the furlong which was used in land grants. In "The Customs of London" by Richard Arnold (1502) there is a record of a 5,000 foot distance being called a "mile."
@qwertyTRiG
@qwertyTRiG 2 жыл бұрын
And then there's the Swedish mile, which is 10km.
@timothymclean
@timothymclean 2 жыл бұрын
@@qwertyTRiG That sounds like a joke. I hope it isn't.
@gamermapper
@gamermapper 2 жыл бұрын
@@qwertyTRiG I think if the US would switch to metric, having new imperial units redefined as being very close to metric, for example an inch being 30 centimeters and a mile being 6000 inches would be good for continuing this as a vernacular unit but with standardisation
@qwertyTRiG
@qwertyTRiG 2 жыл бұрын
@@gamermapper Aye, that's basically what Sweden did.
@dannypipewrench533
@dannypipewrench533 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I was hoping someone would point this out. This is why the Roman mile is included, because it was the Imperial mile until the mile was lengthened for the furlong.
@theironchicken8196
@theironchicken8196 2 жыл бұрын
2:36 fun fact, actually! We do sort of still use the unit "pica." I work in a historic print shop and it is very commonly used there, to the point of having special pica rulers. Many typographical things are measures in picas and points (as mentioned at 3:54). A pica is almost exactly 1/6 of an inch, and a point is 1/12 of a pica. For example, a 12-point font is exactly one pica tall. Therefore, if you are typing and the font size is divisible by 12, your text is that many picas tall. I believe that historically, picas are a bit off from 1/6 of an inch exactly, but the picas and points used in modern text editing programs do correspond to exactly six picas per inch.
@apenasumcoalamagico8638
@apenasumcoalamagico8638 2 жыл бұрын
Not even remotely related, but in Brasilian portuguese "pica" is a slang for penis Reading this and keeping a straight face was painful
@Robmaster-pk4lw
@Robmaster-pk4lw 2 жыл бұрын
I only now pico, which is 1×10-¹²
@alahiri2002
@alahiri2002 2 жыл бұрын
@@apenasumcoalamagico8638 I laughed out lout when I read this again with this new context. I don’t think picas were historically anything near 1/6 of an inch, but I do think OP might have a micropica.
@ramelo07
@ramelo07 2 жыл бұрын
@@apenasumcoalamagico8638 hes talking about a really small pica. a piquinha
@cericat
@cericat Жыл бұрын
@@spcxplrr Yeah it would be either the 1978 standard of 1/72.27 or the 80s DTP (Desktop publishing pixel in this usage) that Warnock, Paxton et al established with Adobe Postscript which is 1/72th. Conversions between tradition printing and desktop publishing are a whole headache on their own because while there's representation of legacy typefaces on computers... ugh the early 90s were rough on printers that were trying to work around expectations and necessities that came from multiple formats (the pt traditionally hasn't been very consistent across typefaces, countries, manufacturers...).
@chrisamies2141
@chrisamies2141 Жыл бұрын
When the 'cubic inches' example came up I thought that was something I'd never encountered then realised I had. Because car manufacturers in the USA give engine sizes in cubic inches and everyone else uses litres, I had at the back of my mind that 100 cubic inches = about 1.6 litres. (it's actually 1638).
@TheF22a
@TheF22a Жыл бұрын
2 things Nautical mile was better defined as 1 second of latitude which is why it’s really beneficial to use in air and water applications And the best way to remember the mile to foot ratio is ‘5 tomatoes’ 5 to-mat-oes 5 2-8-0
@Xnoob545
@Xnoob545 Жыл бұрын
the last thing literally doesn't help at all Understand and remembering the tomatoes thing is harder than memorizing the number
@ttt5020
@ttt5020 Жыл бұрын
technically that would be the same as 1 second of longitude too, right? Since the earth is a sphere.
@ttt5020
@ttt5020 Жыл бұрын
@@Xnoob545 Gonna have to disagree. Pretty well established in psychology that a strange phrase or visualization, like someone juggling 5 tomatoes, is much more memorable mnemonic than an abstract number. It’s not hard at all to understand to me. Five two m-eight ohs.
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
@@ttt5020 1. The earth isn't a perfect sphere, or even a perfect spheroid its lumpy and that has funny consequences like the American GPS moving the prime meridian ≈100m from where the UK defined it. 2. The lines of longitude intersect at the poles so the distance between them varies with latitude, where as the lines of latitude are parallel so the distance between them are consistent. (So no it isn't possible to define 1 arc second of longitude as a nautical mile)
@ttt5020
@ttt5020 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonreed7522 Ah right- 1 arc second of longitude only at the equator then!
@syzygy6
@syzygy6 2 жыл бұрын
I find it helpful to consider the historical roots of different units. For example, the acre. An acre is an amount of land which one person with one ox can plough in one day. Not only that, but an acre was generally defined to have a particular shape, long and narrow, which is most practical to plough (because turning a plough around is inefficient). even though it’s not particularly convenient from a standardization perspective, i find it very useful to have multiple systems of units to connote different uses. an acre is very useful for measuring agricultural land, because it was designed as a measure based on agriculture labor. Likewise a mile was designed to measure long distances travelled on foot, while a block has absolutely no standard definition but is universally useful for describing distances in urban environments. I love having multiple units of measurement.
@cameron7374
@cameron7374 2 жыл бұрын
To my knowledge, a block is about 1 cubic meter and works quite well when playing Minecraft.
@rhozq
@rhozq 2 жыл бұрын
Nope, 1 system is better.
@MachineMan-mj4gj
@MachineMan-mj4gj 2 жыл бұрын
@@rhozq Right, lets handicap ourselves and use only one method to describe things.
@pepz8505
@pepz8505 2 жыл бұрын
@@rhozq I'd much rather not use Celsius to measure outside temperature. Fahrenheit is better for that.
@syzygy6
@syzygy6 2 жыл бұрын
@@pepz8505 I don’t mind Celsius for outside temperature at all, but I also just don’t find it inconvenient to use different temperature scales since I never have practical cause to convert between them.
@Ganjor420
@Ganjor420 Жыл бұрын
I was quite surprised by how much those units influence our way of thinking. For example Americans using different systems for “length” and “distance” sounds so strange when it’s just a larger number for us.
@jasonreed7522
@jasonreed7522 Жыл бұрын
I guess imperial trains us try and keep things in a range of 1/4 unit to 10 units although being in the hundreds is fine. And since im an engineer I'm used to metric as well and often estimate stuff under an inch with cm or mm to try and stay within that 1/4 to 10 unit range. Although the video makes the point that measuring human scale objects like furniture doesn't need to be easily convertable to the unit for long distances. A couch can be measured as 10ft long and a city is 10miles away, although we measure trips as both litteral distance in miles and travel time in hours or minutes as relevant. I see it as metric as great for science with its easy conversions, and imperial is great for human scale without breaking out decimals or weird fractions.(although both have some hidden abominations like the metric ton being a megagram or the fact a pound mol exists for imperial the way mol exists for grams in SI/metric)
@SqueakyNeb
@SqueakyNeb 11 ай бұрын
I appreciate your comment on feet being a "comfortable" unit for working on human sized things. As a metric Australian (born in the 90s even), I do find inches far easier to visualise and think about than centimetres. Centimetres are too small for anything I'm directly going to use, and being a little bit off in my guess of a centimetre is proportionally quite significant. Estimating inches feels much more reasonable.
@stephenlee5929
@stephenlee5929 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this, I too, don't believe the imperial systems are better than metric, but they don't deserve the ridicule and have some minor advantages. They are much more about people than the metric system.
@ellidominusser1138
@ellidominusser1138 8 ай бұрын
Well yes, people made them before everything was about accuracy like in modern day's industrialized world.
@loganpearlman9331
@loganpearlman9331 2 жыл бұрын
Also, nautical miles were barely mentioned but nautical miles (1852 meters) and derived units like knots have conversions to meters and miles but are defined as the arc length of one minute of latitude (1/60th of a degree) which is very useful for naval navigation, really makes sense on a global scale and would never be used or expected to be known by an average impearial user. Miles which are Roman paces (and does have a Latin prefix i just realized) are a totally different but similar distance unit
@browncoat697
@browncoat697 2 жыл бұрын
What's funny is that the nautical mile, being the arc length of one minute of latitude, is essentially defined in the same fashion as the original definition of the meter, being 1/10,000,000th of the distance from either pole to the equator. One minute of latitude means that the nautical mile is 1/3600th the distance from the equator to a pole. Exact same idea. And despite metric seeking to rationalize everything into tens/powers of ten, degrees, minutes, and seconds are still around, because 60 is a fantastic number, being evenly divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, and 30.
@donkeysaurusrex7881
@donkeysaurusrex7881 2 жыл бұрын
“The Chart” states hands are not in general use, but they are a common way to give the height of a horse.
@DragonWinter36
@DragonWinter36 2 жыл бұрын
People also use them to hold things, I think
@killerbee.13
@killerbee.13 2 жыл бұрын
If you think horse-measuring is "general use", I'd like to introduce you to the concept of an "outlier"
@scrabblehandforaname
@scrabblehandforaname 2 жыл бұрын
​@@yozul1, honestly, I was under the impression the unit was used to give a sense of scale in horse races.
@1224chrisng
@1224chrisng 2 жыл бұрын
it's weird that the hand has an asterisk, but the point doesn't, but I guess a lot more people type on computers than they do ride horses
@HBMmaster
@HBMmaster 2 жыл бұрын
that asterisk is there because it's also there in the NIST handbook
@J.J.1798
@J.J.1798 9 ай бұрын
My grandfather and his brother used to measure things in “acrewalls” (660 feet) and “acrends” (60 feet I think) they also measured rain in points and distance in Irish Miles just to make it extra confusing, but they would never tell you which miles they were using so you just crossed your fingers and threw the map out the window.
@GH-oi2jf
@GH-oi2jf 8 ай бұрын
It would have been 66 by 660 feet. It derives from the US Public Land Survey System, in which acres could be surveyed as 4x40 rods. Forty rods is a furlong, so that is the length you would plow before resting your ox.
@piergiorgio919
@piergiorgio919 Жыл бұрын
Yeah man a liter of water is way more consistent than 7000 fucking grains of barley 💀💀
@pannekook2000
@pannekook2000 2 жыл бұрын
One thing I wish you had touched on was units of pressure, which are surprisingly bad in metric. A pascal is defined as a Newton per meter squared, which is a comically unwieldy unit to work with. A bar is defined as 10^5 pascals (breaking the otherwise consistent power-of-ten prefix system) and manages to be just slightly short of 1 atm. Atmospheric pressure is 1.0135 bar / 101350 Pa, which is sometimes enough to be a problem in calculations (but not always!). On the other hand, a psi (pound of force per square inch) is a much less unwieldy unit, and while atmospheric pressure is 15.7 psi I think it’s at least useful in that it’s never ambiguous whether or not you can be lazy and pretend 1 bar = 1 atm. Altogether I think this is a rare place where the metric system is at its limit and is arguable strictly less sensical than the imperial system Edit: 14.7 not 15.7 psi
@pannekook2000
@pannekook2000 2 жыл бұрын
Also: people don’t use centibars, kilobars or megabars, they use kilopascals, megapascals, and gigapascals, which are tough because they’re defining things in terms of the awkward tiny unit instead of the not-quite-atmosphere-pressure unit and it’s impressively difficult to get a sense of how much pressure that actually is; I couldn’t give you any physical intuition as to what might exert a megapascal of pressure on an object. I’m a chemical engineering student so if there was anyone who should have that intuition it should be me. I can only (unhelpfully after a bit of mental math) say 1 megapascal is sort of like 10 atmospheres
@talideon
@talideon 2 жыл бұрын
That's why metric has sensible methods of scaling unit. The bar isn't exactly a hectopascal, but close enough. The bar is a non-metric measure, and the hectopascal and kilopascal (if you're Canadian) are the usual measure. The Pascal is closer in purpose to the psi. Quick question: how many bar per psi?
@martinsriber7760
@martinsriber7760 2 жыл бұрын
Consistency and accuracy are more important than what you consider unwieldy.
@pannekook2000
@pannekook2000 2 жыл бұрын
@@talideon a hectopascal is .001 bar. If they are the same I am going to put you in a room at 1 bar then cut a small hole in it, exposing it to an environment at 1 hectopascal. A bar is 14.5 psi.
@pannekook2000
@pannekook2000 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinsriber7760 I work with these units for a living, trust me when I say that it is preferable if your engineers have a physical intuition for what a unit is. Makes problem solving a Lot easier. Psi are stupid in other ways because of pounds force vs pounds mass but there is not a perfect unit for measuring pressure
@gdemerald
@gdemerald 2 жыл бұрын
as an American who uses imperial every day, I have literally never heard of the majority of the measurements on that chart lmao
@ski2578
@ski2578 2 жыл бұрын
same al ive heard were centimeters, milimeters. feet, yards and miles lol
@cericat
@cericat Жыл бұрын
As an Australian, we have used metric since my mother was in school. I'm acquainted with most of them to some degree though, hell even here despite being metric the registries usually require we still use hands to measure our horses. Pounds and stones (14 pounds) were still semi common when I was a kid in the 80s to measure a person's weight. Mostly that's died thankfully. Nautical miles, and knots, are stil referenced especially in maritime service and flight as well. Pica and Point are used pretty much globally in printing still. Acres are still used for area when we're talking land. Grain is still a unit of weight used for propellant in firearms, also the weight of arrows and crossbow bolts. So yes while they're antiquated and annoying AF when you're constantly having to do conversions, aka me, a lot of them still get used in edge cases I just went for ones I know are still commonly employed in at least a limited sphere.
@SmallSpoonBrigade
@SmallSpoonBrigade Жыл бұрын
That's not surprising. This is a complete system, it's just that most of the units don't serve a particular point these days that can't be served with one of the others. For the most part, the gaps are either only apparent for things like physics/engineering like slugs or fall in the hole between yards and miles. Chances are that you're not talking about things of that length often enough to care about having to use slightly larger numbers of either feet or yards. Chances are in that range quarters of a mile are good enough for the precision of what you're doing.
@brianwright9514
@brianwright9514 Жыл бұрын
I've gotten pretty used to using metric since my firm has been metric-only since the 80's. But I grew up learning imperial first, so I constantly have to translate... Which is annoying. It's especially annoying when people use weight and mass units improperly.... I'm looking at you pound-mass and Kilogram-force.
@katrinablox1470
@katrinablox1470 Жыл бұрын
Same
@AkoyaMizuno
@AkoyaMizuno Жыл бұрын
The switch from imperial to metric is pretty recent here in Canada (April 1, 1975). That's well within living memory. So in practice you still get a lot of mixing between the two, especially within older generations. Even I - a millennial who grew up learning the metric system in school - still uses imperial for certain things. My height? 5' 7" My weight? around 250lbs (yes, I'm fat, I know). Speed? kilometers per hour. Volume? litres. Everything depends on what I'm measuring. And I'm pretty sure we're not the only country that mixes measurement systems like this. (Also, because I am a total weirdo, I actually measure the distance from one place to another in time. I do not care how many kilometers or miles away it is. That is genuinely never relevant to me. Tell me how long it will take me to get there!)
@ChandelordChandel-wi6hx
@ChandelordChandel-wi6hx 10 ай бұрын
I think most people do, at least in my expierence Greetings from Spain
@colinlinzer4355
@colinlinzer4355 7 ай бұрын
I do this in the us
@NoriMori1992
@NoriMori1992 4 ай бұрын
I'm Canadian, can confirm. Also my mom thinks in Fahrenheit because that conversion was relatively recent too. I think it's pretty normal to measure distance by travel time.
@rainbowlack
@rainbowlack 4 ай бұрын
Also, the temperature outside is measured in Celsius, but temperatures for cooking and baking are in Fahrenheit
@microcolonel
@microcolonel 11 ай бұрын
One fine point: the point you described is essentially not in use. Current use of the point is the Desktop Publishing Point, which IS exactly 1/72 of a Customary/International inch.
@timothymclean
@timothymclean 2 жыл бұрын
Since Jan Misali only briefly mentioned traditional units still in use, I'd like to inform you that a traditional Turkic unit of mass still used in Afghanistan named the "batman"...which, if I'm reading the IPA right, is pronounced exactly like you're sure it can't be. Wikipedia notes that different parts of Afghanistan have batmans of different sizes, ranging at least from 3.5-35 kg (8-80 lbs).
@ohhnyx9229
@ohhnyx9229 2 жыл бұрын
Batmans of all sizes! Batmans for the whole familly!
@radiotelegram
@radiotelegram 2 жыл бұрын
Ideal for robin tourists.
@ajavisk
@ajavisk 2 жыл бұрын
There is a turkish city names Batman
@aa01blue38
@aa01blue38 2 жыл бұрын
You're probably reading the IPA wrong, because batman the character name is pronounced /ˈbætmən/, while the unit is /batˈman/ which would probably sound more like bahtmahn if I had to guess.
@joegrey9807
@joegrey9807 2 жыл бұрын
@@aa01blue38 in UK accents for the character's name, the two vowels are pronounced the same, although we use schwa (notated by the upside down e) we don't use it here.
@pipolwes000
@pipolwes000 2 жыл бұрын
"units having silly names is a good thing" As a fan of the barn-megaparsec, I concur
@xwtek3505
@xwtek3505 Жыл бұрын
Actually, converting between km and m is pretty common. For example, a toll road marker usually gives a distance between current location and the start of the toll road in km and m subdivision. Like: 72km 600m
@toomanymarys7355
@toomanymarys7355 Жыл бұрын
That's just 72.6 km.
@fredgoodyer4907
@fredgoodyer4907 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: in the UK at least, Google maps (and alternatives) say your turning is in some miles, and then it does, indeed, suddenly become yards. It is habitually a source of great distress for me on new journeys!! Also, I sometimes, genuinely and non-ironically, use barleycorns and poppyseeds as units of measurement as they are for (UK) shoe sizes I believe: one size bigger is for feet one barleycorn longer :)
@jasonwiley798
@jasonwiley798 Жыл бұрын
Google maps also gives driving directions not walking directions. With one-way streets it can be a long walk.
@stephenlee5929
@stephenlee5929 11 ай бұрын
@@jasonwiley798 Google maps can be made to work for walking and I believe cycling(though I have never tried). Also pretty sure it can be set to work in K. meters, but again I don't use that.
@SmallSpoonBrigade
@SmallSpoonBrigade 11 ай бұрын
@@stephenlee5929 Yes, there is a setting for nagivation on foot.
@MTM358
@MTM358 10 ай бұрын
Interesting, US maps apps switch to feet under like 0.2 miles.
@janpeke1948
@janpeke1948 9 ай бұрын
@@MTM358and I really wish it didn’t bc idk how far 100 feet is when I’m driving
@dylansp4049
@dylansp4049 2 жыл бұрын
Even though I’m American, I surprisingly was taught about centimeters back in kindergarten class. But that is all they taught us, I used centimeters so much I always thought they were a weird division of inches, I was shocked to learn centimeters are an entire different system. Edit: Yeah so apparently what I find surprising is surprising in of itself.
@ncpolley
@ncpolley 2 жыл бұрын
America technically is on metric, because we define our imperial units by metric units, so it's not that odd imo.
@ClementinesmWTF
@ClementinesmWTF 2 жыл бұрын
What’s surprising is you think this is surprising. Most Americans are taught the entirety of the metric system alongside the US Customary. It’s weird that you were taught so little
@jstnrgrs
@jstnrgrs 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in elementary school, I think it was still thought that America would eventually go metric, so we only used metric units in Math. Oddly enough, I've gone into a career in science, and we do use metric exclusively. (Yes I, and American, use the metric system. GASP!)
@dylansp4049
@dylansp4049 2 жыл бұрын
@@ClementinesmWTF That’s weird, I had to research the rest of the metric system on my own time.
@charliekahn4205
@charliekahn4205 2 жыл бұрын
@@jstnrgrs changing all the signs is a waste of money, and everything else that's objective has been changed.
@sam-rs8wg
@sam-rs8wg 2 жыл бұрын
To continue with the sentiment of this video, and as your refined chart implies, I use Nautical Miles every day as a pilot and I have no idea what the conversion factor is between a NM and SM. It is a different idea entirely, and I never regard either in relation to another. Funnily enough, we use SM for weather, and NM for navigation, and guess what, it works perfectly.
@calmeilles
@calmeilles 2 жыл бұрын
1 nautical mile = 1 mile, 265 yards, 1 foot, 1 inch, 385.826771653543307086614 mil. 😀
@hellothere7358
@hellothere7358 Жыл бұрын
I just want to let you know that the little details in your vids, the dark mode especially, don’t go unappreciated. Keep up the great work 👍
@FirstNameLastName-gh9iw
@FirstNameLastName-gh9iw 4 ай бұрын
I was talking to a friend about how next week it’s going to be negative one, he was like oh that’s pretty cold, and than I specified “Fahrenheit” and his eyes bulged and he went “oh that’s COLD”
@billbadson7598
@billbadson7598 2 жыл бұрын
tl;dr "Almost all measurements for anything are handled with one, maaaaybe two units, and while we technically need to be able to convert one unit into another for regulatory and legal purposes in various contexts, in common usage this is never done. And even though metric makes it a million times easier to convert one unit into another, it's still of limited added utility because nobody needs to know how many centimeters apart two cities are, or how many kilometers taller their child grew this year."
@leoyoutube123
@leoyoutube123 2 жыл бұрын
It's so easy to do that it is actually funny. From the top of my head, I know people who live a trillion micrometers away, and someone who measures 0,003km taller than last year.
@Duiker36
@Duiker36 2 жыл бұрын
@@leoyoutube123 Easy but pointless isn't actually a good design goal.
@Duiker36
@Duiker36 2 жыл бұрын
@@leoyoutube123 Also, are you really claiming that you know someone who grew 3 meters in a year?
@ncpolley
@ncpolley 2 жыл бұрын
@@leoyoutube123 Wait. 0.003 km is 3 meters. IS it that easy to do the equation?
@vladprus4019
@vladprus4019 2 жыл бұрын
@@Duiker36 It is not pointless. This makes any more specific calculations way easier. Not that useful for everyday life, but for scientists and specialist - absolutely amazing.
@g4_61
@g4_61 2 жыл бұрын
“Something doesn’t add up here, or in this case, multiply.” Well played. Edit: by the way, the editing on this is great! Nice job!
@esk5646
@esk5646 2 жыл бұрын
I mean multiplication is just doing a bunch of addition at the same time
@bananacat3109
@bananacat3109 2 жыл бұрын
ESK 56 my math teacher as a sophomore in high school said that division is just multiplying by fractions and subtraction is just adding negative numbers so they don’t exist. hard to argue with that really
@Anonymous-df8it
@Anonymous-df8it 2 жыл бұрын
@@bananacat3109 And roots don't exist as it's just exponentiation to the power of a fraction!
@emeraldeea
@emeraldeea Жыл бұрын
I posit that in the modern era, anthropometric measurement is still super useful. In elementary school I was taught that an inch was about the length of my thumb, which was accurate at the time, and i eventually extrapolated from this idea and measured the span of my hand, distance from thumb to forefinger, and more, so that i can approximate measurements without a ruler. I also pay attention to what certain portion sizes look like in my hand, and i use this every day at work where i make salads and sandwiches (corporate would probably prefer i used the scale and scoops lol). Honestly, i often have a tape measure with me but still find myself measuring with my hands.
@setlerking
@setlerking 9 ай бұрын
Imperial is super good for quick but imprecise measurements, not a bad thing, it’s useful when you only need a practical approximates. Metric is good for precision and in theoretical approximates
@petrselic3235
@petrselic3235 10 ай бұрын
In parkour comunity (even in Europe), we use literal feet to measure gap/jump distances and its practical, because for example child has small feet, so its equally hard to jump his 10 feet as for me and my 10 feet. And of course you always have your legs with you😂 so you just step-measure it
@mr.gentlezombie8709
@mr.gentlezombie8709 2 жыл бұрын
For any of you folks out there who've never used Imperial measurements and imagine they're like the worst thing ever, a good illustration for what Imperial measurement is like would be how pretty much everyone measures time. Time is measured using a number of arbitrary units, and there are conversion factors including but not limited to 7, 24, 30, 52, 60, and 365.24. Now all of this isn't exactly ideal: If you ever need to convert 1.573 days to seconds, you're gonna want a calculator. However, that was an arbitrary, contrived math problem and you just don't need to do those unit conversions very often in everyday life. If you need to precisely convert units en masse, there are computer programs to do so, and in other cases mental math usually suffices.
@cluelessmango768
@cluelessmango768 2 жыл бұрын
Time is indeed measured with weird ass numbers, but if I could choose a system of measuring time that would use base 10, I would. Wouldn’t you? Fact is, time is a mess because we don’t get to choose when it’s day or night, but we do get to choose what a pound or killogramme is.
@mr.gentlezombie8709
@mr.gentlezombie8709 2 жыл бұрын
​@@cluelessmango768 Day, month, and year are units that are helpful to have, yes. But if we wanted factors of 10, there's nothing stopping us from replacing hours, minutes, and seconds with centidays, millidays, microdays, etc.
@iamthinking2252_
@iamthinking2252_ 2 жыл бұрын
And that was what I found on a Wikipedia page about “mixed radix”
@mr.gentlezombie8709
@mr.gentlezombie8709 2 жыл бұрын
@@iamthinking2252_ Umm what?
@cabesaofsama6063
@cabesaofsama6063 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I also wish time was in decimal. I hate those moments
@katieandkevinsears7724
@katieandkevinsears7724 Жыл бұрын
One interesting thing about 5280, the number of feet in a mile. It is divisible by 2,3,4,5,6,8 and 10. That may have something to do with why it's used.
@TheZerech
@TheZerech Жыл бұрын
This is a great point I hadn't thought about.
@caritahearts2405
@caritahearts2405 Жыл бұрын
Yep, and it makes sense actually, I really only have American perspective on this... but we seem to use ½ miles and ¼ miles and so on more often, while other countries would say 0.5 km and 0.25 km because their system is made for decimal. Same with cups and pounds, vs liters and grams. We like using fractions
@KomiksPakesShow
@KomiksPakesShow Жыл бұрын
@@caritahearts2405 just for context, we don't use "0.5km" or 0.25km" we use 500 meters and 250 meters, when we have to work with decimals we automatically convert the unit, because it is very easy to do
@RhazOfRheos
@RhazOfRheos Жыл бұрын
@@caritahearts2405 The metric system is not made for decimals. Who in the right mind would say 0.5 Km or point 0.25Km? It would be better if you said that it was made for whole numbers. we can convert everything into an actual real value because its an ACTUAL system. Hek, we say half a kilometer or a quarter kilometer more than actually ever using decimals. Ironically, Imperials use decimal a hek of a lot more often than Metric because it cant do anything that doesn't have an exact value and thats what most people hate about it.
@TheSpacePlaceYT
@TheSpacePlaceYT Жыл бұрын
Great point lol. I convert my videos to include metric stuff because international units are pretty useful to have in your pocket. I'ma take the time to learn the metric system so I don't have to say "I'm 5'6" when discussing my height.
@Neuvost
@Neuvost 10 ай бұрын
One thing I'm not sure whether non-'Muricans realize is that in any situation where an equation uses more than one kind of unit, we use the metric system. So in high school chemistry and physics class, we only use metric.
@Neuvost
@Neuvost 10 ай бұрын
Maybe it's cuz I was raised in the city, but I don't use miles at all. I've said, "I went to college about an hour north of the city," for example. And, now that I think about it, I suppose I also only think of distances inside the city in terms of travel time.
@FG-ww8rc
@FG-ww8rc 10 ай бұрын
In Canada we still use both for a LOT. I like imperial for small measurements, inches and feet. And for measuring weight pounds feels more precise than kilograms. Kilometers are used more common than miles though
@jakman2179
@jakman2179 2 жыл бұрын
Another complaint I often hear is that the pound is a measure of force where gram is a measure of mass, but the distinction only matters for those who have gone to space, or are in need of precision greater than 1/1000th (the variance across earth is about 0.7%). And even where the distinction does matter it's easy enough to overcome considering most mass is measured as the weight divided by gravity.
@IONATVS
@IONATVS 2 жыл бұрын
Also, while that was traditionally true, the pound-mass (lbm, the mass of an object whose weight is 1 lb at 1g of gravitational acceleration) has replaced the slug as the standard unit of mass in most imperial systems, to the point that the US Bureau of Weights and Measures defines the pound in relation to the pound-mass (which is defined in relation to the kilogram) nowadays and in many contexts lbm is just labelled “lb” and “traditional” pounds are explicitly marked as pound-force (lbf) instead. So that “problem” is going away...even if it’s created the new problem of did this person mean lbf or lbm when they wrote lb?
@MattMcIrvin
@MattMcIrvin 2 жыл бұрын
It matters to physicists, but physicists pretty much never use US customary units professionally. I can't speak for engineers. (That Mars probe debacle back in the day was about units of impulse, newton-seconds vs. pound-force-seconds, so I guess they were using pounds-force at the time.)
@IONATVS
@IONATVS 2 жыл бұрын
​@@MattMcIrvin US engineers need to use a horrid combination of both systems because of companies that are too cheap to replace their legacy equipment that's calibrated in US customary and standards written that assume customary. Depends on the specific industry, but each usually use one or two of the rare units too, like Tons of Refrigeration in HVAC or Degrees Rankine in power generation. And weird hybrid units like kilopound-forces (kips) and Megapounds per square inch (Msi) that use metric prefixes on imperial bases (though I actually like hybrids like that more than actually using units like tons).
@Jeremy-gy7me
@Jeremy-gy7me 2 жыл бұрын
​@@IONATVS British Thermal Units (BTUs) are by far the most annoying for engineering, " the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit." or 1,055 Joules. Except that everything is powered in watts so this conversion happens often enough and is just far enough off of a clean 1000 to be extremely annoying.
@IONATVS
@IONATVS 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jeremy-gy7me I learned BTUs in college. but am SO glad I'm not a thermo guy so never have to use them at work. Also learned Tons of refrigeration, which are a similarly annoying unit used almost exclusively for refrigeration and HVAC systems, defined as the energy required to freeze/melt 1 ton of pure water/ice at the freezing point.
@samueldionne9675
@samueldionne9675 2 жыл бұрын
Now that you explained that miles and feet come from two different systems of measurement, everything makes more sense. Obviously when converting between systems there are going to be wacky numbers.
@Robin-of2jt
@Robin-of2jt Жыл бұрын
all the stuff about nails, palms, digits and such is something i'm somewhat familiar with but only as a person with a hobby for dress history, where old sewing guides are written using those units. it's really something no one uses outside of discussing certain aspects of history
@btonasse
@btonasse Жыл бұрын
You actually just made it look worse. It's even stupider to use many different units from many different systems and pretend that they will never have to interact with each other.
@LeakyTrees
@LeakyTrees Жыл бұрын
Except he's not pretending. We literally never use miles in relation to feet, or vice versa. And why would we? Miles is a measurement of distance, i.e., measuring something you can't pick up, while feet is a measurement of something tangible that you can interact with. The only times people use miles to measure actual things is when they're boasting, like half mile long aircraft carriers. Miles never interact with feet in any meaningful way, and I've never ever in my entire life had to convert between them.
@theplanetmercury7487
@theplanetmercury7487 2 жыл бұрын
Also, to non-Americans. Much in the same way that basically anyone who speaks a non-English language usually learns English, especially if they're young enough, most young Americans have at least a basic understanding of the metric system, for the same reason. If you say "5 kilometers" we're usually good enough to say "3 miles-ish".
@martinsriber7760
@martinsriber7760 2 жыл бұрын
I keep hearing/reading that, but considering number of Americans who ask "how much is that?" when metric units are used, I very much doubt it. You might be way too optimistic.
@elizabethb4168
@elizabethb4168 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinsriber7760 as an American who really was never taught anything about how the metric system works, I think they might be a little too optimistic
@TrifectShow
@TrifectShow 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinsriber7760 I have. It is taught as a standard.
@pastaman68
@pastaman68 2 жыл бұрын
yeah i cant convert celcius to fahrenheit but most rulers/yardsticks have the centimeters labled on the opposite side anyway so its not that hard to approximate it for length/distance
@harriam0
@harriam0 2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately thats highly dependent on what education you got which is organized at the state level (In other words massively inconsistent). Especially if you're in a STEM heavy school or have a more modern curriculum you're likely to be working in metric a fair amount but the older the curriculum and the less focus on science in particular the less likely it is you've had much exposure to metric units. That's not even mentioning school to school variations which tend to be much more pronounced as you go up grade levels.
@alyciagoode3564
@alyciagoode3564 2 жыл бұрын
I like that the units in imperial have many factors. 12 inches in a foot, so a foot has 3 factors. I took woodshop in high school, and preferred using the imperial system in there because it was easier to measure halves, quarters, eighths, and so on. The metric system is easier IMO for math/science calculations.
@fifzeppelin
@fifzeppelin 2 жыл бұрын
The true issue is that we do not use a base 12 number system. Base 10 is frankly weird and not ideal for dividing in metric. Imperial kinda accounts for this in a decent number of practical applications, but if we were base 12 the metric system would not have the issue to begin with.
@MachineMan-mj4gj
@MachineMan-mj4gj 2 жыл бұрын
That's basically what most Americans do anyway; Imperial to eyeball it, metric for precision. It's easier to visualize a foot (your foot) or an inch (first thumb segment) than it is to visualize a meter. "six feet tall" sounds more impressive than "1.8 meters tall".
@lizardlegend42
@lizardlegend42 2 жыл бұрын
@@MachineMan-mj4gj that's only because you grew up with imperial, not an inherent quality of the units. I can't visualise feet well in the slightest for example and always have to roughly convert to metres for it to make much sense to me at all
@MachineMan-mj4gj
@MachineMan-mj4gj 2 жыл бұрын
@@lizardlegend42 Well that sounds like a you problem.
@lizardlegend42
@lizardlegend42 2 жыл бұрын
@@MachineMan-mj4gj yeah... it is, that's my point. Because I only really grew up with metric, metric is what's intuitive to me. Neither system is ingerently more intuitive than the other
@Trenz0
@Trenz0 10 ай бұрын
As a US engineering student, I hate imperial when doing dynamic analysis. Slugs are such a weirdly important unit of calculation that we literally never hear of outside of engineering. The tendency to just input lbs when dealing with mass is so hard to break since thats the units my brain associates with weight (yes, I know that's a force. Colloquially weight is often equated with mass so I'm culturally conditioned)
@twylanaythias
@twylanaythias 11 ай бұрын
Should you decide to revisit this topic, you might also consider the fact that most units within the 'Imperial System' exist explicitly because they are human in scale: ~ Feet and Inches, originally based on the human body (length of one's foot and width of one's thumb), are perfectly logical for measuring objects human beings interact with. Hand is still used with livestock (horses in particular), being a similarly convenient way to quickly measure how big an animal is. ~ Mile (based upon one thousand paces) is also the approximate distance a person is able to see while on land (as terrain is rarely flat enough to see beyond this distance). ~ League is similarly based upon the approximate distance a person is able to see while at sea - approximately three miles, owing to the curvature of the earth. This varied some (from 2.4 for someone in a rowboat to 4.6 miles for someone in a crow's nest) but was later standardized to three miles. ~ Fathom is an Old English term referring to the distance between a man's outstretched arms. It was primarily nautical, providing a ready means for sailors to lower a weighted rope over the side to determine how deep the water was. Cable (or Cable-Length) was literally the standardized length of cable connected to a ship's anchor. (100 fathoms for US ships; 120 fathoms for British ships.) ~ Chain and Furlong are both derived from an Acre (1/640 of a square mile), which is the amount of land a single farmer could reasonably work in a single day. While 43,560 square feet seems arbitrary, it is rather conveniently the product of one Chain (66 feet) by ten Chain (660 feet) - the latter also dubbed a Furlong because it was more convenient to plow a *furrow* in the *long* direction. ~ Rod and Link, in turn, are derived from the standardized Chain used by surveyors. A full Chain (used for longer distances) was comprised of 100 interconnected segments (each Link being ~8" in length) so it could be stored in a canvas bag for transport; a Rod (used for shorter distances) was comprised of 25 Links, being lighter and easier to transport. (See sahistoryhub.history.sa.gov.au/sites/default/files/styles/gallery_full_crop/public/media/2003-95_survey_chain.jpg) ~ Point is used exclusively in printing (as you said) and originated as the smallest discrete unit one could consistently gauge with an unaided eye. As you can see, despite their varied origins, all these units are very intuitive in regards to being human-scale. Even when inexact (before they became better standardized), they readily conveyed a sense of the scale you were dealing with. A Mile was a short walk or easy run; a Fathom was roughly a man's height; Feet denoted something vaguely human-sized while Inches indicated something which could readily be carried; a League was how far one could see if there were no obstructions (such as when at sea). Bonus: ~ Mil came about in the Industrial Era to measure thin materials - abbreviated from the original term "mili-inch" (thousandth of an inch, just like the Metric System). ~ The ropes sailors used to measure the depth of water were seldom more than 100 feet in length. The phrase "too deep to fathom" was literal, in that they didn't have the means to actually determine how deep the water was beyond the length of their ropes.
@GH-oi2jf
@GH-oi2jf 11 ай бұрын
It isn’t just convenience that makes the “hand” (4 inches) useful for measuring the height of a horse. The foot is too coarse a unit and the inch is too fine. The hand is convenient, though, even though you probably don’t have a measuring stick marked in hands. If you calibrate the height of your shoulder in hands, then you can easily estimate the height of a horse when standing next to it.
@twylanaythias
@twylanaythias 11 ай бұрын
@@GH-oi2jf Yes, granularity! That was the term I was trying to pinpoint. The units used in the 'Imperial System' are aptly suited for the dimensions to which they are applied.
@shang6158
@shang6158 2 жыл бұрын
You could start with Feet and Inches and build an entire system based in Multiples of 12. You could start with Feet and Palms and build an entire system based in Powers of 2. Whichever you prefer, some unit just got redefined and now there's a a four-digit decimal conversion.
@linkhidalgogato
@linkhidalgogato 2 жыл бұрын
or u could just use metric
@LaggyKar
@LaggyKar 2 жыл бұрын
You could start with metric units and define dozenal prefixes (e.g. you could make it so 1 kidometer = 1728 meters, similar to 1 kibimeter = 1024 meters). Done. Without having to make up a bunch of new units.
@Salsmachev
@Salsmachev 2 жыл бұрын
@@LaggyKar You'd want to define new units. One of the few things I like about metric is how carefully they chose the units (which is important when unit size is mostly out of your control). Yes the greatmetre (a great gross of metres) is close to a mile, which is great, but you'd want to calibrate it to make sure the other units end up being useful too. Also I propose 12^-3 is small- then petti- and unci-. Above the basic unit: doza-, grossa-, great-, monstro-, giganto-, titano-. No thoughts on powers below small-
@ClementinesmWTF
@ClementinesmWTF 2 жыл бұрын
@@linkhidalgogato you might’ve missed the meta-point of his comment: metric was arbitrarily made up in the beginning just like he described already defined units.
@shang6158
@shang6158 2 жыл бұрын
@@ClementinesmWTF Yeah. Every one of these units that confuse us now made perfect sense to the person who thought of it. They lived a long time ago, a long ways away, and spoke a totally different language. The Roman Mile was Mille Passus, literally just the phrase 'Thousand Paces' in Latin. It got shortened to Mille and then to Mile, and since we don't speak Latin the originally clear and comprehensible meaning is lost on us. 1000 Paces became 5000 Feet, which then became 5280 because some ruler, a thousand years later, half a continent away, came up with a scheme to raise taxes by changing the length of a foot. People don't just make bad systems, they make systems that work for them, and problems creep in over time.
@joseppi1121
@joseppi1121 2 жыл бұрын
in a practice round for debate I had to make the argument that the US Government shouldn't switch to metric and it went absolutely terribly (this was my second ever round so it makes sense) except for when my opponent asked, "how many ounces are in a pound?" to which I quickly and confidently replied, "16" and then my opponent asked, "how many pounds are in a ton?" to which I even more quickly replied, "2,000." After I said this my opponent got visibly red because the material he had prepared in response to my not knowing imperial units went to waste because I frequently spend hours learning the relationships between US customary units and have an incredibly good memory for random bullshit.
@tomkerruish2982
@tomkerruish2982 2 жыл бұрын
Your opponent could have easily shot back, "Wrong on both counts!" For you see, there are 12 ounces in a Troy pound and 2,240 pounds in a long ton. The former fact makes for a great riddle based on the fact that a pound of a precious metal (e.g. gold) weighs less than a pound of anything else, since the two categories are weighed using different types of pounds.
@npswm1314
@npswm1314 2 жыл бұрын
@@tomkerruish2982 He could have gone even further and pulled out some historical Imperial system because the English Imperial system used by Americans isnt the only one but they have roughly equivalent measurements, at least in terminology. Example: The Austrian Imperial system of measurement.
@joseppi1121
@joseppi1121 2 жыл бұрын
anyways, GOOD VIDEO
@MeesterTweester
@MeesterTweester 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah it works if you know it lol
@Nae_Ayy
@Nae_Ayy 2 жыл бұрын
Lmao
@BAMFmilitia84
@BAMFmilitia84 25 күн бұрын
Finally, some awesome and entertaining metrology content!!! I’m so glad you talked about SI units!
@setlerking
@setlerking 9 ай бұрын
In Sweden we have a measurement called a “mile” but it’s metric, meaning 10 kilometres
@MattiasKesti
@MattiasKesti 2 жыл бұрын
You are very correct in that ~30 cm is a very useful human scale measurement. Growing up in Sweden, the rulers we were assigned in primary school were 30 centimeters long. I still, 30 years later, sometimes think of lengths in "number of rulers".
@vulpes7079
@vulpes7079 2 жыл бұрын
Let's say I had a 50cm long ruler at home...
@danielbishop1863
@danielbishop1863 2 жыл бұрын
The standard ISO A4 paper size (296 mm) is also close to a foot.
@egemensentin
@egemensentin Жыл бұрын
The convenience doesn’t come from its scale but only from the fact that we had foot-long rulers and the supply chain that made them readily available. Same with the “19 l” jugs used with water coolers - they are actually 5 US gallon jugs. We could have 20 l jugs to round things up, but we just couldn’t be arsed 😂 Modifying established supply chains is hard.
@985476246845
@985476246845 Жыл бұрын
@@danielbishop1863 and the other side is 210 and its actually 297.301 rounded to nearest mm. this is the formula 2^(1/4−n/2) where n is your paper size, for the short side 2^(-1/4−n/2)
@sportsracer48
@sportsracer48 2 жыл бұрын
I advocate using the plank mass wherever possible. It's about 20 micrograms, so it's useful in dosing certain drugs.
@hindigente
@hindigente 2 жыл бұрын
That's a very tiny plank.
@1224chrisng
@1224chrisng 2 жыл бұрын
isn't there a common joke that some Americans know metric quite well? to fend off your 1/8th of a gram from the rival gang, you'd use your 9mm
@tsawy6
@tsawy6 2 жыл бұрын
dang, I'll keep that in mind
@drdca8263
@drdca8263 2 жыл бұрын
issue I think is that it hasn't been measured as precisely as some other units, due to the difficulty in measuring G as precisely as one might want?
@tsawy6
@tsawy6 2 жыл бұрын
@@drdca8263 Eh, we got G to 6 sig fig.
@shannonmcbride2010
@shannonmcbride2010 Жыл бұрын
Looks like I'm 9 months late to the party, but since people are still commenting, here's a few thoughts (which were likely covered in the previous 7.52 kilocomments by the current counter): 1 - Although the video treats the nautical mile (nmi) as some strange appendage to the USCS, it's actually insanely useful to anyone who navigates by air or sea. 1 nmi = 1 minute of latitude. So your chart always has a baked in scale if you have lat / lon markings on it. Same applies to knots (nmi / hr). 2 - lots of people cite fractions as something implicitly wrong with the imperial system. But there is such a thing as decimal inches. You can even buy a decimal inch tape measure without looking around too hard. Also, humans are eerily good at eyeballing the midpoint of a line. If you know what an inch is, you can get to a 16th with surprisingly good precision. 3 - Using N-m as a unit of torque sucks if you're wrenching on stuff instead of designing it. I know what 15 lbs feels like and most wrenches are about a foot long. So it's easy to guesstimate 15 ft-lbs is. And I know what a kg weighs, roughly, so that wouldn't be bad, but who the hell knows what a Newton feels like? 4 - If you think that all metric units are convertible by powers of 10, I'd like you to take a look at your watch....
@toomanymarys7355
@toomanymarys7355 Жыл бұрын
What you mean is that we need a new system with the nautical mile as its base...in base 12. 🤔
@toomanymarys7355
@toomanymarys7355 Жыл бұрын
Also revolutionary France tried to make a 10-hour day and a 10-day week, but they realized that the peasants would slaughter them all very soon if they kept that up!
@AliciaWhimsicott
@AliciaWhimsicott Жыл бұрын
The second is not a metric unit, it is an SI unit, but that does not make it metric. If it were metric, it would be decimal time.
@forestreese1704
@forestreese1704 Жыл бұрын
Also for point 3, pounds per square inch is much more intuitive for pressure than atmospheres.
@OrangoTheAndro
@OrangoTheAndro Жыл бұрын
I agree with 1 but: 2) Decimal inches exist yes but feet is still 12 in not 10, Its not uniform Metric is. 3) It comes to what you are used to, If you always used to N-m then it wouldn't be too hard and infact the opposite will be true, So if both can be used without problem, Use the better one. 4) Time & angles are not metric! For time the second is an actual SI unit but hours, minutes etc. aren't. There does exist metric time where: 100s = 1min, 100min = 1h, 10h = 1d, 5d = 1w, 25d/5w = 1mon, 10mon = 1y (definitions vary) but all this hasn't been implemented. Interms of angles its a fight between Radians (more mathematically useful since units of π are used) and Gradians (more metric since right angle=100°) Radians are very commonly used but for common use they are kinda terrible but gradians haven't been much widespread If a big push is made then metric time and gradians could succeed but it'll be too much effort.
@luciferlucy9066
@luciferlucy9066 Жыл бұрын
This may be my favorite video of yours this is my fourth rewatch it’s that good.
@luciferlucy9066
@luciferlucy9066 11 ай бұрын
Fifth
@ebbingtime
@ebbingtime 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair, metric becomes leaps and bounds more useful than imperial in the context of science. Defining a kilogram as the mass of a litre of water is actually extremely useful in most science fields, as water is by far the most common solvent in chemistry and also a good analog for flesh in biology.
@asj3419
@asj3419 2 жыл бұрын
It's pretty helpful for some everyday activities too, when baking most things have a density close to water.
@willpestka2745
@willpestka2745 Жыл бұрын
It also makes finguring out some standard values and unit conversion factors possible when a look up table isn't exactly available (exams)
@linoshcaalomar3951
@linoshcaalomar3951 Жыл бұрын
With the exception of celcius, though, which is just a worse version of Kelvin in scientific contexts
@sinanaydn7907
@sinanaydn7907 Жыл бұрын
@@linoshcaalomar3951 it's not that bad, you just add 270-280 something to Celsius to find Kelvin and for everyday usage, Celsius is more useful imo
@methyod
@methyod Жыл бұрын
Bro nobody is saying that metric isn't better than imperial. Lmao these people
@justinlapicola8505
@justinlapicola8505 2 жыл бұрын
I never thought about how the imperial system is super easy to divide into halves, 3rds and 6ths. That’s pretty useful for construction and such.
@mikoi7472
@mikoi7472 2 жыл бұрын
A big reason why our system is the way it is, also is because of the fact it's really easy to reproduce without any kind of standard. The imperial ruler for example uses 12 inches, you can mark half, get 6, mark half again get 3s, and it's this reproducibility that made it very effective for such a long time. And at this point while metric is easier for maths and certain precision, the fact that imperial is tied to metric makes conversion very easy and thus forcing the change unnecessary.
@Mortablunt
@Mortablunt 2 жыл бұрын
Yes the main advantage of imperial measurements for daily use it’s just how easily they subdivided into nice even fractions. For example it’s much more comfortable to say a quarter pound versus asking for 250mg of something. The foot also divides out nice and easily too. The metric system is nice in some ways because it scales by tens however in daily life you really have to scale things by tens and also people aren’t computers
@ZenoDovahkiin
@ZenoDovahkiin 2 жыл бұрын
@@Mortablunt "It's much more easy to ask for a quarter pound than to ask for 250mg", because you, Mortablunt on KZbin, have just unilaterally decided that saying "a quarter kilo" is impossible (which is 250g, not 250mg, by the way; 250mg is a quarter gram). We use "half a kilo", "a quarter liter", etc all the time. See, this is the thing with these "muh daily life" comments: People used to SI don't generally know how Imperial is actually used in daily life, and Imperial defenders, especially Americans, seem to be either misguided or willfully misrepresenting the daily use of SI. We do not talk about bloody miligrams in day to day life unless we tell the apothecary lady what dosage of a medication we need, or unless you work a job where these are the dimensions you work with. "Imperial is more intuitive in normal life" is something said 100% exclusively by people who grew up using Imperial and have no experience with metric units and who are completely ignoring or not understanding the fact that this perception is exclusively due to habit. People used to metric units have the opposite experience. This is pure cope.
@Mortablunt
@Mortablunt 2 жыл бұрын
@@ZenoDovahkiin Hey, check it out, an arrogant Euro!
@Shotblur
@Shotblur 2 жыл бұрын
@@ZenoDovahkiin holy bait, britbong
@fizwiz81
@fizwiz81 Жыл бұрын
This is an amazing video, thank you for posting these for free!!
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