Brexit: Government to launch study on economic benefits of reintroducing imperial units
<strong>Exclusive: </strong>Business minister mocked for ‘ludicrous’ attempt to quantify ‘Brexit benefit’
What intrigues me most is the numbering system that you have in your Regs. 2,3,41,2,3, etc. It's doing my head in making sense of it!I really like the bebs standard numbering for switchgear etc.
You knew instantly what phase, what circuit - whether it was metering, protection, trip circuits, aux etc and roughly where you were in the circuit!
Still got the mustard pamphlet:
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Which regs are those?What intrigues me most is the numbering system that you have in your Regs. 2,3,41,2,3, etc. It's doing my head in making sense of it!
Now I understand why people want to move to imperial, a gill is 1/4 of a pint - so around 3x a current 35 - 50ml serving!
And perhaps, really telling tel, is 50cl is 1/2 litre - close on a pint.
So ...
It stems from history, traditionally England was 1/6 Gill, Scotland 1/5 Gill, Ireland was also 1/5 I think.This helps me understand why a measure of spirits is 25ml in GB.
Can someone explain why a measure of spirits is 35ml in NI?
Should of added, I only know this stuff because my parents owned an off licence when I was a young child, and always held an interest, so when I moved to Scotland, almost the first question from my dad was "how about the larger shots..."It stems from history, traditionally England was 1/6 Gill, Scotland 1/5 Gill, Ireland was also 1/5 I think.
These were translated to metric resulting in 25ml (and 50ml for a double) in England, and 35ml for Ireland and Scotland. Often in Scotland a double is only 50ml.
Anywhere in the UK, the measure must be multiples of 25ml or 35ml, so in England they could serve in 35ml, just as you could serve 25ml in Scotland or Ireland.
Should of added, I only know this stuff because my parents owned an off licence when I was a young child, and always held an interest, so when I moved to Scotland, almost the first question from my dad was "how about the larger shots..."![]()
Recently (as in 3 years ago?) buying two G&T in London and handing over £20 and then looking at the pittance of change i got back. Barman was "Ah mate, your not from here are you?"I remember the first time being served a 25ml measure in England - made me question who the most miserable UK nation really was.
Scottish £20? Shall we start a rant about “legal tender”???Recently (as in 3 years ago?) buying two G&T in London and handing over £20 and then looking at the pittance of change i got back. Barman was "Ah mate, your not from here are you?"
Why ???At first I thought that was a spoof article, or April 1st joke.
Because all changes in the last century have been to adopt metric standards for everything.Why ???
Yes... exactly... like sheets of plywood... at present it is illegal to sell a sheet that is exactly 8' x 4' as 8' x 4', it must be sold as 2440 x 1220 mm... absolutely and utterly bonkers !!! When we originally joined the EU we managed to agree a few exceptions, like pints of milk, pints of beer, miles for road markings etc... but now that we're free from all that nonsense, we should be able to use the most appropriate sizing.Yes, some standards and usage is backed-in to certain industries and products
No it is not!Yes... exactly... like sheets of plywood... at present it is illegal to sell a sheet that is exactly 8' x 4' as 8' x 4', it must be sold as 2440 x 1220 mm... absolutely and utterly bonkers !!!