Re: Imperial measurements.
#29 Fair comment Marion since I retired, 7 years ago my wife became housebound so I do all the shopping and cooking and buy most of my meat from COSTCO, its cheap and good quality, but you have to buy big packets so most of it goes straight in the freezer, no idea what it weighs.
On slightly different subject
I went on drilling rigs in the late 80s and every length of drillpipe ( approx 30 ft) has to be measured before it goes in the hole so they know exactly where the drill bit is in what could be a 30,000ft hole. I was amused to see that the measuring tapes used had 10 inches to the foot, the foot is the correct size but the inches on the tape are actually 1.2 imperial inches. When I asked why, the reply was it makes it easier for counting. This is standard Worldwide on drilling rigs although many companies now use metric measurements.
Re: Imperial measurements.
Hectopastals, sounds a bit like some form of throat lozenger.
But there could be a benefit in going back to pounds shillings and pence.
Then Cappy would have no excuse for not paying the 3/9 three farthings back.
Re: Imperial measurements.
#33 Bet you thought a decometre was to measure the rust on the deck as well John.
If it was to replace 6 inches, then by the same token 3/9 should be about 13 pence, and as 13 is unlucky Cappy might settle for 12 pence , which by present day scrap prices out here , is 6 empty beer cans . Cheers JS
Re: Imperial measurements.
Yes and he would by the beer with the money and give you the empty cans to bet your money back on.
Re: Imperial measurements.
Think I have mentioned in another forum, of taking a nephew who was studying at Launceston Nautical College down to do a draught survey at Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal. AS the ship came alongside, an old Greek ship, I noticed draught marks were in Imperial, and of course all tables were in long ton's. He of course was completely out of his depth, but I was able to work with it, with a lot of thought. Really got the grey matter working.
Was at the physio's a few months back, and young lady was doing things by 12's. I asked her if she had been trained under an elderly person. She looked perplexed and I had to point out she was using an imperial measure, not a metric. Don't think she really understood the difference.
Re: Imperial measurements.
Maybe they would if they were on a ship 60:years ago and they were fined 100 pounds for every inch overloaded , especially if the fine was 3.25 inches and it was in sterling of old . JS