Ok Kitchenaid calm down

nakedfrog

No Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
62,168
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My fridge was an incredibly close fit to get into my kitchen, the delivery guys said it couldn't be done so I told them thanks and sent them home. Rubbed a little paint off the doorframe, but the fridge did fit. Maybe if they'd had this level of precision in specs I could have chosen differently.
 
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nakedfrog

No Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
62,168
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You mean centimeters? Not sure one needs to go to the level of nanometers for measuring white goods and furniture.
I was making a point that we do, in fact, still call it a nanometer despite it being somewhat less than 1% of a unit of measurement.
 

pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
22,249
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My fridge was an incredibly close fit to get into my kitchen, the delivery guys said it couldn't be done so I told them thanks and sent them home. Rubbed a little paint off the doorframe, but the fridge did fit. Maybe if they'd had this level of precision in specs I could have chosen differently.

Did you take the doors off and take it through the door sideways. I had to do this on our counter depth refrigerator. Had plenty of room with the doors off.

Did you have an unusually narrow door or was it a standard door width?
 

nakedfrog

No Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
62,168
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Did you take the doors off and take it through the door sideways. I had to do this on our counter depth refrigerator. Had plenty of room with the doors off.

Did you have an unusually narrow door or was it a standard door width?
Yep, took off as much of it as I could. Standard AFAIK, house was built in 1975 and not a custom job so far as I can tell. Kitchen does have a pocket door so maybe that slimmed it down a touch.
 
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sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
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My guess is Whirlpool contractors operate on metric and 1/25" is close enough to 1mm so they just use that to simplify conversion of measurements less than one inch.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
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Yeah I can't imagine a situation where I need to know a house related dimension to a 125ths of an inch - or any reasonable household tool that would allow me to get to that level of exactness

I ordered a fridge, measured the opening to make sure it fits. except I only measured the top and not the bottom... Took drilling into the tile and put an angle bracket in place to force the bottom of the cabinet panel enough to fit in the fridge. Contractor thinks moisture got to bottom of the cabinet panel.
 

stargazr

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2010
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As a machinist, I would prefer to see the measurement in decimal form rather than uncommon fractions for perspective. But, like for the first one, 17/25" could have been rounded off to 11/16", which is only .008 smaller. (way less than one millimeter - which is .03937)
 
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pmv

Lifer
May 30, 2008
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My guess is Whirlpool contractors operate on metric and 1/25" is close enough to 1mm so they just use that to simplify conversion of measurements less than one inch.

But then why at the same time use fractions of 1/125 and 1/100 for the other dimensions? Just use a calculator and express it to a couple of decimal places. Or round it to the nearest 1/8 of an inch (which is what is usually marked on tape-measures). Or use metric like the civilised (not civilized, curse you spell-checker!) world
 

[DHT]Osiris

Lifer
Dec 15, 2015
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But then why at the same time use fractions of 1/125 and 1/100 for the other dimensions? Just use a calculator and express it to a couple of decimal places. Or round it to the nearest 1/8 of an inch (which is what is usually marked on tape-measures). Or use metric like the civilised (not civilized, curse you spell-checker!) world
Cuz 1/125ths of an inch went to the moon, that's why.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
99,566
17,627
126
But then why at the same time use fractions of 1/125 and 1/100 for the other dimensions? Just use a calculator and express it to a couple of decimal places. Or round it to the nearest 1/8 of an inch (which is what is usually marked on tape-measures). Or use metric like the civilised (not civilized, curse you spell-checker!) world

who knows.
 

pmv

Lifer
May 30, 2008
15,045
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Cuz 1/125ths of an inch went to the moon, that's why.

If they were installing white goods on the moon (with free delivery), maybe that level of precision might be appropriate.

Though I don't know why they didn't go with 100/792002 of a furlong, in place of inches, if they really wanted to drive their customers insane.
 

[DHT]Osiris

Lifer
Dec 15, 2015
17,269
16,491
146
If they were installing white goods on the moon (with free delivery), maybe that level of precision might be appropriate.

Though I don't know why they didn't go with 100/792002 of a furlong, in place of inches, if they really wanted to drive their customers insane.
Because furlongs didn't go to the moon. It's a really easy concept.