Why does the US use Fahrenheit?

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Babbles

Diamond Member
Jan 4, 2001
8,253
14
81
For the most parts!!!

I think just about all of "us" measure pressure in PSI and not kPa and use BTU (British Thermal Units) instead of, oh crap, forgot the metric term.
Lets see, you also have a radiation dose measured in rems, but the metric term is sieverts, the absorbed amount is rads but metric is gray (gry).

Well that is all I can think of at the moment.
 

Pepsi90919

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,162
1
81
Originally posted by: antiABIT
I am just thankful we did do it.

I mean it sounds so much more drastic, when the weather forcast states "Todays high was a mild 83 and tomorrow will be a blistering 97" than to say "Todays high was a mild 26 and tomorrow will be a blistering 27".

no.....
 

dighn

Lifer
Aug 12, 2001
22,820
4
81
Originally posted by: antiABIT
I am just thankful we did do it.

I mean it sounds so much more drastic, when the weather forcast states "Todays high was a mild 83 and tomorrow will be a blistering 97" than to say "Todays high was a mild 26 and tomorrow will be a blistering 27".

that kind of exgerration isn't fair. 14*5/9 =7.8, not 1
 

Pepsi90919

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,162
1
81
Originally posted by: dighn
Originally posted by: KenGr
Actually, for everyday use Fahrenheit is a more practical and usable system. Even in the scientific world, Celsius is of dubious advantage. Yes, water is common but how often do the freezing and boiling points of water enter into chemical calculations?

Fahrenheit is intuitive. In the Northern Hemisphere temperate climates, 0 is about as low as the air gets and 100 is about as high as it gets. If you've ever noticed, Celsius thermometers and thermostats often have half degree increments while Fahrenheit does not need them. Metric makes sense in weight and length measurement, etc., but isn't really necessary in temperature measurements.

i find celsius infinitely more intuitive than fahrenheit. must be b/c i grew up with it :) see my point?

celsius does have an advantage in the scientific world b/c its scale is identitcal to kevin's

who's kevin?
 

dighn

Lifer
Aug 12, 2001
22,820
4
81
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: dighn
Originally posted by: KenGr
Actually, for everyday use Fahrenheit is a more practical and usable system. Even in the scientific world, Celsius is of dubious advantage. Yes, water is common but how often do the freezing and boiling points of water enter into chemical calculations?

Fahrenheit is intuitive. In the Northern Hemisphere temperate climates, 0 is about as low as the air gets and 100 is about as high as it gets. If you've ever noticed, Celsius thermometers and thermostats often have half degree increments while Fahrenheit does not need them. Metric makes sense in weight and length measurement, etc., but isn't really necessary in temperature measurements.

i find celsius infinitely more intuitive than fahrenheit. must be b/c i grew up with it :) see my point?

celsius does have an advantage in the scientific world b/c its scale is identitcal to kevin's

who's kevin?


i meant "kelvin"
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
126
Originally posted by: sward666
Has anybody ever considered metric time?

gah! doesn't anyone read the posts in the thread anymore?!?! THERE WAS A METRIC SECOND INVENTED BY THE REVOLUTIONARY FRENCH (ALONG WITH THE REST OF THE METRIC SYSTEM). THEY ALSO INVENTED A REVOLUTIONARY CALENDAR AS WELL WITH DIFFERENT NAMES FOR DAYS AND MONTHS
 

FredFredrickson

Senior member
Nov 11, 2002
272
0
0
Originally posted by: Radiohead
I totally forgot why & now it's bugging me...

Tried googling & searched here but to no avail.

So yeah, why?

I think the more important question here is...
Who give's a rats @$$?
 

jaydee

Diamond Member
May 6, 2000
4,500
4
81
We should seriously start changing from degrees to radians. WHY is there 360 in a circle?!?!

"Did you see Tony Hawk's 14(pi)/3 jump on ESPN last night?!
 

Tom

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
13,293
1
76
Fahrenheit is based on body temperature so it is better. EOS

Boiling water is damn hot if you stick you finger in there, so 212 is an good number to represent the burning.

72 is like a gentle breeze caressing your body.

everyone knows 0 is frickin' COLD ! as it should be.


 

Howard

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
47,982
11
81
Fahrenheit is based on body temperature so it is better. EOS

Boiling water is damn hot if you stick you finger in there, so 212 is an good number to represent the burning.

72 is like a gentle breeze caressing your body.

everyone knows 0 is frickin' COLD ! as it should be.
And how is this based on body temperature?
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
39,398
19
81
Originally posted by: Dead Parrot Sketch
Fahrenheit is based on body temperature so it is better. EOS

Boiling water is damn hot if you stick you finger in there, so 212 is an good number to represent the burning.

72 is like a gentle breeze caressing your body.

everyone knows 0 is frickin' COLD ! as it should be.


Prime example of learned behavoir. The number means nothing other than the value we have associated with it over time. If 1000 degrees DPS was boiling then you'd think 500 was cool.
 

StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
Because it hasn't matured yet. Freezing point should be at zero. Boiling point should be at 100. Not some stupid ass number.

And there shouldn't be 12 inches in a foot. There should be 100 cm in a meter. 1000 meters in a kilometer, not 52xx feet in a mile. In time the US will embrace the future. Metric is that future!!
 

Sid59

Lifer
Sep 2, 2002
11,879
3
81
i have no idea ho much a kilogram weighs. I can only estimate when people give heights in metres. 95% of the time, i get confused when someone tells me the temperature in Celsius.

At least i got the base10 down.
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
126
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Because it hasn't matured yet. Freezing point should be at zero. Boiling point should be at 100. Not some stupid ass number.

And there shouldn't be 12 inches in a foot. There should be 100 cm in a meter. 1000 meters in a kilometer, not 52xx feet in a mile. In time the US will embrace the future. Metric is that future!!

one arbitrary number is no better than another.
 

Zenmervolt

Elite member
Oct 22, 2000
24,514
44
91
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Because it hasn't matured yet. Freezing point should be at zero. Boiling point should be at 100. Not some stupid ass number.

And there shouldn't be 12 inches in a foot. There should be 100 cm in a meter. 1000 meters in a kilometer, not 52xx feet in a mile. In time the US will embrace the future. Metric is that future!!
Actually, Fahrenheit does have a freezing point at 0, it was based on a saltwater mixture, not on pure water.

ZV
 

ProviaFan

Lifer
Mar 17, 2001
14,993
1
0
Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Because it hasn't matured yet. Freezing point should be at zero. Boiling point should be at 100. Not some stupid ass number.

And there shouldn't be 12 inches in a foot. There should be 100 cm in a meter. 1000 meters in a kilometer, not 52xx feet in a mile. In time the US will embrace the future. Metric is that future!!
one arbitrary number is no better than another.
Well, "arbitrary" numbers based on a consistent base 10 system work better than the screwed up joke of a measuring system that the ancient British gave us (no offense to them, at least their government was smart enough to see their old system for what it is, and now they're using metric).

Yea, so there's 12 inches in a foot. Fine enough. To be consistent (like metric), we'd need 12 feet in a yard, and 12 yards in a mile. If it were that way, at least we'd have some consistency. But still, people only have 10 fingers. ;)
 

blackhawk

Platinum Member
Feb 1, 2000
2,690
1
81
Its an old system but not conducive for conversions or scientific use so the french invented the metric system when they threw out their monarchy, and from there its spread.

The english now use metric even for their money! The american gallon is unique in the world, 5/6 of an imperial gallon.

I'm in aviation and the different measurements all over the world keep you on your toes. Pressure is reported in metric but western instrumentation is in imperial, inches of mercury, altitudes are in imperial, distances in weather reports in Canada, metric, USA imperial, runway distances all over the western world, in imperial.

In some remote places in the high arctic where Norad had radar sites, fuel was in american gallons, tanks were measured in liters and fuel burn was in pounds per hour.

My country switched to metric about 20 years ago and I work in both but my kids only use metric and my parents only understand imperial. The USA had said they'd switch about the same time but backed down due to resistance to change.