

Moderators: Head Monkey, kelvin, bigKam, skidesmond, chrismp
I can't believe you guys still have feet and inches.skidesmond wrote:Mine has both as well and yeah, you have to pay attention to which side you're reading. Picked it up at Sears. It's already made my ski building life much easier.
I remember we had to learn the metric system in school because the US was going to switch over to it... that was like 40 years ago!
skidesmond wrote:
So is the Swedish mile like a country mile?
OAC wrote:A country mile is probably more a figure of speech, like 'down the road a ways', 'over yonder', 'as the crow flies' or my brother-in-laws short cutsskidesmond wrote: ....
I'm not sure what a country mile is?
Here is the SI system: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internatio ... m_of_Units
Look at the map a bit down in the article. You (USA) are pretty alone, with Burma and Liberia!...Any day now, or...?
. It has no real definition as far as I know but it's more than a mile (1.6km) and probably less than 3 miles (4.8km). Usually further than you want to walk.
Doubt we'll switch anytime soon. I remember the gov't started putting up highway signs in miles and KM along time ago, but I don't remember seeing any in a long time.
Speaking of business opportunity... A local guy developed a new type of tape measure. Unfortunately it's not metric. But clever none the less.OAC wrote:I see a business opportunity here...