Since we're on heights at the moment, here's an item about the world's tallest man, who featured in a number of newspapers in the U.K. last week. I've lifted it from this website without altering or omitting anything:
HUSSEIN BISSARD, who at 7ft 9 inches tall is the world's tallest and biggest man, travelled to Franco's shop in Croydon for a pair of custom-built shoes.
Hussein chose this establishment because every pair Franco makes are perfectly fitted to the individual's feet, starting with a mould of each foot and taking into account any special requirements.
Franco said "It was such a challenge, making a really big pair of shoes for this guy, that's why I wanted to do it."
Franco says, "It must be impossible for someone like Hussein to get shoes."
The shoes took Franco 6 months to make and and the finished products were two staggeringly huge size 20s, measuring 15 inches in length and 5 inches across the width of the toe.
Mr Bissard was really pleased with his shoes and I am too. Hussein Bissard and Franco Crawford, in making these mega masterpieces Franco used a piece of material that was 6ft by 5ft in size.
HUSSEIN BISSARD, who at 2.36 m tall is the world's tallest and biggest man, travelled to Franco's shop in Croydon for a pair of custom-built shoes.
Hussein chose this establishment because every pair Franco makes are perfectly fitted to the individual's feet, starting with a mould of each foot and taking into account any special requirements.
Franco said "It was such a challenge, making a really big pair of shoes for this guy, that's why I wanted to do it."
Franco says, "It must be impossible for someone like Hussein to get shoes."
The shoes took Franco 6 months to make and and the finished products were two staggeringly huge size 51s, measuring 38 cm in length and 13 cm across the width of the toe.
Mr Bissard was really pleased with his shoes and I am too. Hussein Bissard and Franco Crawford, in making these mega masterpieces Franco used a piece of material that was 1.8 m x by 1.5 m in size.
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 10:17 AM
Tony
Are you seriously trying to suggest that people still use feet and inches for peoples heights in the UK??
Tony Bennett
Depth of ignorance
September 28 2005, 11:02 AM
re (Andy): "Tony - Are you seriously trying to suggest that people still use feet and inches for people's heights in the UK??"
REPLY: Thank you very much for that, Andy. Your question explains much. I'm sorry to say this so bluntly - and I really do not intend to be rude - but it does reveal the depth of your ignorance about the use of customary weights and measures in the U.K.
Just to make two very brief points. Every day in the U.K., literally thousands, maybe tens of thousands of people advertise in what are called 'personal' columns in local or national newspapers and magazines looking for a mate, partner, someone to go out with, or perhaps 'seeking fun'.
In line with the universal practice in the U.K., they *all* - whenever they give their height, which is often - give their heights in feet and inches.
We also have a TV programme called 'CrimeWatch', watched by millions. The heights of suspects are given out in feet and inches.
Only if you grasp hold of these facts - and others like them - will you understand anything at all about why some of us defy the bureuacrats - and UKMA's three men, one woman and a dog - who wish to obliterate all this.
P.S. In the latest survey specifically on understanding of metric and Imperial distances and dimensions (in the U.K.), 98% said they 'understand Imperial', against only 29% who said they 'understand metric'. Reversing these figures - 2% not understanding Imperial and 71% not understanding metric, over 35 times as many people do not understand metric dimensions and distances as do not understand Imperial dimensions and distances
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 11:07 AM
Tony,
Pipe down a bit mate! ;-)
I'd put a 1000 pounds on Andy giving you a gentle ribbing!
He lead you to a trap an I believe you might have put your foot in it!
Fibbing Nutcase
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 11:10 AM
Imperialist,
Pipe down a millibit mate! mg/mmol
I'd put a one kilo-euros on giga-Andy giving you a milli-ribbing!
He Pb you to a mega-trap an I believe you might have put your 33 cm in it!
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 11:48 AM
Oh dear.
I thought it was obvious enough not to need a ;-)
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 12:41 PM
Just goes to show how dangerous it can be to leave out that little diffuser of a smiley!
Hey, maybe "Danny/Fibbing Nutter" keeps forgetting to use them and he's been joking all along? Would explain his bizzare take on life!
..
erm
..
:-D
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 1:10 PM
<<<Just goes to show how dangerous it can be to leave out that little diffuser of a smiley!>>>
Indeed, but I think it also reveals a lot about our friend Mr Bennett.
I've had more than enough debate with him, for him to realise that I wasn't being serious.
Everything is black and white to him. Because I am pro-metric, he assumes that I have the same obsession with metric as he has for imperial. It annoys me to think of the time I have wasted debating with him, when he clearly has no time for any opinion that differs from his own.
You simply cannot have a reasonable debate with him. He is no better than the other nutters on here.
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 3:27 PM
Hold on Andy, everyone has a bad day now and again.
Martin threw his toys out yesterday when he thought that the producers of Crimewatch were caught up in a conspiracy of quoting feet and inches because of "The Sun" newspaper.
Now that does not put him in the same camp as eric and danny, and neither should it this time with Tony.
Yes I was surprised by his answer but maybe it was a one off? Don't forget you pro-mets all look the same sometimes! [ ***JOKE*** ].
You've had some good dialogue with TB in the past - very readable - don't let one posting put you off.
By the way - you may have noticed "metre" (eric) is back.
I guess that means I need to be an outdated dimwit who loves bootlicking yanks whilst using cumbersome measurements and acting all medievel with my horse and cart whilst I plan my next witch-burning ritual.
....Cos I like imperial.
and yes..
";-)"
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 4:01 PM
<<<everyone has a bad day now and again.>>>
hmmm, these bad days seem to be most days at the moment.
This constant posting of random articles quoting imperial measurements (even when not notable in any way) or telling us that the euro is a failure, doesn't really add any more to the debate than the postings of the others you mention. It also suggests that he is equally as detached from reality.
Its a shame because he should have interesting things to contribute.
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 4:02 PM
<<<everyone has a bad day now and again.>>>
hmmm, these bad days seem to be most days at the moment.
This constant posting of random articles quoting imperial measurements (even when not notable in any way) or telling us that the euro is a failure, doesn't really add any more to the debate than the postings of the others you mention. It also suggests that he is equally as detached from reality.
Its a shame because he should have interesting things to contribute.
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 4:28 PM
To Tony,
I realise that there is a temptation to post antidotes to Danny's farcical attempts to try to understand the economies of various countries and also his attempt to fantasise about metric (eg, cricket, records, almost everything, etc) but could I suggest to you (and some of the normal 'pro-met' people) that the likes of eric and daniel are simply seen as daft conversation destroyers and that you need not post about economic matters as if anyone here actually believes their claptrap. Yes we know that right now the euro is poop and the UK is doing rather well out of it - all UKers and most international posters will already know this.
The best way to show them up is to either ignore tham or ridicule them.
It worked with metre(eric) last time and he left on his own accord.
We've lost the excellent contributor 'Bryan' because too many people took the nutbag brigade seriously - it looks like Andy might go the same way if you simply react to their stupid posts by antidoting them.
I'm generally on your side, mate - but Andy is good "proper" pro-metric debater and if we're not careful we'll end up seeing this place turn into a mallet weilding euro praising Phelps analysing witch burning wasteland as it did before.
Rant well and truly over.
(where do I leave my 2 pence?)
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 4:28 PM
Tony Bennett
Missed the joke - sorry
September 28 2005, 8:14 PM
re (Andy): "Tony - Are you seriously trying to suggest that people still use feet and inches for people's heights in the UK??"
REPLY: OK, so I missed the joke, the heavy irony was it? Still, it gave me the valuable opportunity to remind everyone that 98% of people in Britain, according to a recent independent survey, understand Imperial dimensions and distances, as against only 29% who understand metric.
Now that was a valuable *fact*, right on topic (and nothing to do with the euro), which contributed to the debate, didn't it? Very inconvenient for your side, though.
Just for the record, when you posted a few weeks ago stating that you thoroughly approved of ARM's activities because they would hasten the joyous day of completely metrified road signs, did you mean that? - or maybe not?
Are you able to clarify?
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 8:33 PM
"REPLY: OK, so I missed the joke, the heavy irony was it? Still, it gave me the valuable opportunity to remind everyone that 98% of people in Britain, according to a recent independent survey, understand Imperial dimensions and distances, as against only 29% who understand metric."
Total Caca! You don't survey people on what they claim to know. You TEST them. You ask them questions that PROVE whether they know what they claim to know. You give them a range of problems from simple to complex in both metric and imperial and judge their knowledge of either system by the number of questions/problems they got correct.
Back in the 1970s, the Metric Commission Canada would set up booths in shopping malls and do just that... test people. They actually found that there was a BIG difference between those claiming to understand imperial and actually being able to back it up. The whole exercise was done to DISPROVE claims that people knew imperial and thus could not metricate. The tests proved the people didn't know imperial as much as they claimed.
I took one of those tests in a Toronto shopping mall in 1978. I flunked the imperial and passed the metric. The people taking the test with me didn't do much better.
Beranger
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 28 2005, 9:08 PM
"Still, it gave me the valuable opportunity to remind everyone that 98% of people in Britain, according to a recent independent survey, understand Imperial dimensions and distances, as against only 29% who understand metric."
Very odd....
Just like the last time Tony quoted a recent survey
No link to any proof that such a survey was ever carried out. Just Tony's word on it. The quoted figures certainally don't appear on the BWMA "consumer surveys" page.
Now, look at the transport board - "Kilometre Cock-Up - York etc" thread - my post of 23/8/05 at 9.17pm
"Tony said
"But assuming the 86% preference figure is more or less correct......"
Why should posters to the thread have to assume anything?
If Tony's figure is correct, he should be able to direct us to recent poll figures that strongly suggest that "86% of the country do not want our system of miles, yards, feet and inches on our road signs disturbed"
Looking at the BWMA "consumer surveys" page, I note that the figure 86% does not appear."
Tony gave no proof regarding the quoted survey on that occasion. I doubt he will be able to on this occasion either.
Give us some independent corroboration of your independent surveys Tony!
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 29 2005, 10:15 AM
<<<Just for the record, when you posted a few weeks ago stating that you thoroughly approved of ARM's activities because they would hasten the joyous day of completely metrified road signs, did you mean that? - or maybe not?>>>
Yes - one of the main arguments given for not metricating road signs is that things are fine as they are. If councils want to put up signs in metric, and an activist organisation go round altering them it creates a conflict. However professionally you alter the signs, this situation is clearly unacceptable.
The more conflict there is over the issue, the more likely the government is to step in and resolve it.
Resolving it, could mean either
(a) reinforcing the regulations that metric is illegal
(b) allowing a choice
or (c) changing the regulations to require metric
Given the strict legislation on metric in other areas, (a) is not really an option.
My guess is that we will go straight from (a) to (c)
Tony Bennett
Wishful thinking
September 29 2005, 12:23 PM
re (Andy): "The more conflict there is over the issue, the more likely the government is to step in and resolve it..."
REPLY: Wishful thinking.
Conflict is reducing as more and more Councils accept that metric signs are illegal. North Yorkshire is the recent exception that proves the rule. The BBC and Yorkshire Post both carried news items recently reporting as a *fact* that 'metric road and footpath signs are illegal'. And, yes, 'illegal', not 'unlawful' or 'unauthorised'.
The government did 'step in and try to resolve it', as you put it, Andy. On 21 July 2002 Mike Talbot, Head of the Traffic Signs Policy Branch of the Department for Transport, wrote a stiff letter to every single Chief Executive in England and Wales reminding them of their legal duty under the Traffic Signs Regulations to erect all distance and dimension signs in Imperial. That soon put a stop to most Councils erecting any more unlawful metric distance and dimension signs.
We welcome your past support for ARM's actions and are buoyed up by your renewed message of support. 'Keep up the good work, lads', was your latest message, I believe. Shame that other metric zealots like Beranger don't (yet) share your enthusiasm for our campaign
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 29 2005, 12:43 PM
Tony
You still haven't looked up the word "zealot" have you?
...and looked in a mirror
Beranger, Martin, Stan (anyone else on the pro-metric side)
Do any of you agree with me, that the ARM campaign may be doing their cause more harm than good in th way that I have described above?
Tony Bennett
Zealotry analysed
September 29 2005, 12:49 PM
re (Andy): "You still haven't looked up the word 'zealot' have you?...and looked in a mirror..."
REPLY: I don't want to enforce wine being sold by the pint, nor engine cubic capacity being described in cubic inches.
Metric zealots want to obliterate all traces of Imperial, though, using a raft of additional crimes to achieve their ends
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 29 2005, 2:09 PM
Yes there are metric zealots.
But there are people like myself and Beranger (who you repeatedly call zealots) who do NOT want to "obliterate every trace of imperial"
Can't you accept that not everyone in favour of metrication to a degree to which the term zealous is appropriate?
There is a huge middle ground on this issue, and most of the population occupy it.
metre
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 29 2005, 3:24 PM
Zealotry analysed September 29 2005, 12:49 PM
re (Andy): "You still haven't looked up the word 'zealot' have you?...and looked in a mirror..."
TB
Metric zealots want to obliterate all traces of Imperial, though, using a raft of additional crimes to achieve their ends
metre
From one zealot to another. Let's get rid of the present mess. Since metric is too far advanced imperial is condemned to die anyhow. It will take a long time for it to fade away though. So, don't worry, you still will be burtied in six decent feet of earth.
Tony Bennett
Speak for yourself
September 29 2005, 3:36 PM
re (metre): "From one zealot to another..."
REPLY: Speak for yourself
Tony Bennett
Very very easy question
September 29 2005, 5:04 PM
re (Andy): "But there are people like myself and Beranger (who you repeatedly call zealots) who do NOT want to 'obliterate every trace of imperial'"
REPLY: Right, very good. Will you (and Beranger) please specify which bits of British customary weights and measures you wish to retain in common use - and which you want to destroy, eliminate or obliterate.
It's a very very easy question.
Do you want, for example, within say the next 50 years, to replace all road and footpath signs in the U.K. with metric measurements?
Beranger
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 30 2005, 2:33 AM
Tony
A very wide ranging question!
And that's the second or third time you've called me a zealot! If the shoe fits......
Please post any statements of mine where I call for destruction, elimination or obliteration of any imperial unit.
For every one that you do, I'll find one of my posts supporting the retention of imperial supplementary indications after 2010 or similar & (as an additional free bonus) one of your posts supporting the destruction, elimination or obliteration of a metric unit.
Read my long reply to you on the "Salop" thread for my views on road signs. I have no particulaily strong feelings on the matter, but its always fun to expose your misuse of statistics & twisting of facts.
Tony Bennett
Question ducked, ignored, evaded, not answered
September 30 2005, 7:54 AM
re: "Will you (and Beranger) please specify which bits of British customary weights and measures you wish to retain in common use - and which you want to destroy, eliminate or obliterate. It's a very very easy question. Do you want, for example, within say the next 50 years, to replace all road and footpath signs in the U.K. with metric measurements?
REPLY: Beranger has responded, and as I predicted has 100% ducked the question.
Unless he gives an answer, there is only one possible inference.
That he supports the elimination of all British weights and measures.
As I believe he does
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 30 2005, 10:02 AM
OK heres my response:
Road signs - convert distance signs to metric gradually as was done in Ireland. Then replace speed limits all in one go. Footpath signs replace with metric as they need to be replaced.
Trade - switch to metric only after 2010 (transition period has been more than long enough)
Keep pints in pubs.
Media - allow freedom of choice
Education - continue as now, predominantly metric, but teach the imperial units still in common use.
All other areas - freedom of choice
If that makes me a zealot in your eyes, so be it!
Tony Bennett
Zealotry?
September 30 2005, 2:34 PM
REPLY to Andy:
A: 'OK here's my response'
T: Thanks for making your position clear
A: 'Road signs - convert distance signs to metric gradually as was done in Ireland. Then replace speed limits all in one go. Footpath signs replaced with metric as they need to be replaced'
T: To avoid going over too much ground again, brief points below. Your policy means:
1. Confusion for motorists who will have two different systems. That confusion would last for years
2. Costs running to at least hundreds of millions of pounds when 98% understand Imperial, only 27% metric and 91% of those who express a preference want to keep miles, not switch to kilometres
3. Why? Just because everybody else except America is?
A: 'Trade - switch to metric only after 2010 (transition period has been more than long enough)'
T: This means:
1. criminal penalties for selling 8 oz. steaks
2. criminal penalties for selling 23" TVs
3. criminal penalties for selling 7" x 5" enlargements
4. criminal penalties for selling quaterpounders
5. criminal penalties for selling 1" nails
6. criminal penalties for selling 2" paintbrushes
7. criminal penalties for selling 12" pizzas
8. criminal penalties for selling land by the acre
9. criminal penalties for selling office space by the square foot.
etc.
etc.
etc.
A: 'Keep pints in pubs'
T: Well I agree with you there. But do you want to keep milk being sold in pints? And what is the logic of abolishing the pint for orange juice in the supermarket but keeping it in pubs?
A: 'Media - allow freedom of choice'
T: Does that mean that Burger King can advertise in the newspaper quarterpounders at £1.99? Or Brewers' Fayre advertise 8oz. steaks?
A. 'Education - continue as now, predominantly metric, but teach the imperial units still in common use'
T: Most schools don't bother with Imperial units at the moment. The National Curriculum would have to be firmed up even to achieve that aim
A: 'All other areas - freedom of choice'
T: Would you lift the Directive on government and local authority officials only to use metric in thier internal and external documents (E.U. Directive)?
A: If that makes me a zealot in your eyes, so be it!
T: The dictionary definition of a 'zealot' is: "An uncompromising or extreme partisan; a fanatic". You gave this viewpoint: 'Trade - switch to metric only after 2010 (transition period has been more than long enough)'. As I have demonstrated, this would need criminal penalties, just like the penalties that convicted Steve Thoburn of a crime. I doubt if you could find 1,000 people in the United Kingdom who would want to make it a crime to sell 12" pizzas, 23" TVs or quarterpounders. Yes, for supporting that extreme degree of criminal force and compulsion, I think you are a metric zealot.
As are metre, Beranger, martin, Lord Howe, Roz Denny, Robin Paice and others.
People are content with the current system. You will always be restless until it is changed to your satisfaction
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 30 2005, 3:02 PM
<<<1. Confusion for motorists who will have two different systems. That confusion would last for years>>>
What, like the non-existant confusion in Ireland?
<<<Criminal penalties>>>
Actually I would only enforce certain measurements (metric) where something is sold BY weight/length/area. eg fruit and veg, office space, land, carpets etc
Where it is just a description - 12" pizza, Quarterpounders, 8oz steaks, 1" nails etc I would allow it.
<<<But do you want to keep milk being sold in pints? And what is the logic of abolishing the pint for orange juice in the supermarket but keeping it in pubs?>>>
The logic is that the quantity we buy milk or orange juice in, is irrelevant. The size glass we drink beer is of cultural value.
<<<T: Would you lift the Directive on government and local authority officials only to use metric in thier internal and external documents (E.U. Directive)?>>>
No. That makes sense to me.
<<<As I have demonstrated, this would need criminal penalties, just like the penalties that convicted Steve Thoburn of a crime.>>>
I would certainly not be in favour of being too heavy-handed, although someone like Thoburn would have to convicted as a last resort.
<<<I doubt if you could find 1,000 people in the United Kingdom who would want to make it a crime to sell 12" pizzas, 23" TVs or quarterpounders.>>>
See above. I don't.
How about you give me the same list, and tell me how zealously you would enforce imperial measurements?
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 30 2005, 4:52 PM
"Where it is just a description - 12" pizza, Quarterpounders, 8oz steaks, 1" nails etc I would allow it."
How accurate would those descriptions have to be? If a shop offers a 12 inch pizza, but it is only 280 mm in diameter instead of 300 mm, could it still be called a 12 inch pizza? Would 100 g of Hamburger be OK to call a quarter pounder if all were allowing is trade names? What about 200 g for an eight ounce steak or 20 mm for 1 inch nails?
Is the use of an imperial trade name required by law to be accurate?
Tony Bennett
Zealotry analysed again
September 30 2005, 6:13 PM
re (Andy): "Actually I would only enforce certain measurements (metric) where something is sold BY weight/length/area. e.g. fruit and veg, office space, land, carpets etc. Where it is just a description - 12" pizza, quarterpounders, 8oz steaks, 1" nails etc I would allow it.
REPLY: But this is a distinction without a difference. It makes no sense at all.
Are you saying 8oz. steaks are NOT sold by weight??!!
Or that a pizza is not sold by diameter?
Is the selling of photos e.g. 7" x 5", 8" x 6" etc. covered by "where something is sold BY weight/length/area"? Or paper size? Or the size of say photo albums?
Will you be allowed to buy a '5ft bed'?
Most office space is now sold by square feet which everyone in the field of office space rental understands. Why on earth change it?
Are estate agents going to be required to specify the length and width of rooms and gardens in metres only?
Sorry, Andy, this is zealotry for no purpose other than to satisfy your desire that we should be 'made to go metric'
Beranger
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
September 30 2005, 9:56 PM
Tony
Re your post of 7.53am today
"REPLY: Beranger has responded, and as I predicted has 100% ducked the question."
Have you been taking your medication? Where do you "predict" that I will dodge any question?
In response to your question, I made the valid point that I support the retention of Imperial as supplementary units. How can that be construed as supporting the obliteration of imperial?
I pointed out that you, in comparison, have called for the obliteration of metric on the highways. As an example, here is one of your quotes regarding
obliteration of legal metric signage whilst leaving the accompanying imperial signage.
"ARM supporters yesterday obliterated two metric height signs in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, showing a height for a low bridge of 4.2m."
I answered your question by referring to a post that I had just made on another thread, giving practically the same information.
"Read my long reply to you on the "Salop" thread for my views on road signs."
As you appear to be unable to understand a simple instruction to look at another post for my answer, I'll repost it here
<<<<5) & 6) TB - "Hairsplitting"
I disagree. As usual, Tony, you are seeing everything in black & white. I use miles on a daily basis & have not suggested that I wish to see them replaced with kilometres. I have no problem, however, with tonnes & metres appearing on our roads.
For Road Traffic purposes, the Ton/Tonne & the Yard/Metre are close enough to be considered equivalent. I didn't crash my car the other day when I passed countdown signs to roadworks that read 400m, 200yds & 100yds. The 100yd marker could have been no more than 50 yds from the traffic light.>>>>
If you wish, I'll put it in even simpler & more detailed terms.
For traffic
1) I consider the yard & metre to be close enough in value to each other to be equivalent (for road traffic purposes) for any distance sign up to 0.5 mile/880 yards/800m.
2) Over 0.5 mile/880 yards/800m, I believe that one unit should be used. I honestly don't care whether it is miles or kilometres. I can work with either.
3) Bridge heights & narrow widths should be marked in both units.
For pedestrians
3) I have no problems with any sign representing any distance but aimed purely at pedestrians/non motorised transport being expressed in metric or imperial (or both)
So, in summary, I have no problem with some more metric signage on the roads, but don't wish to eradicate imperial.
And whatever may happen in the future, I do not support the removal of old milestones or finger signposts. You can't read them at speed anyway!
Your turn - Do you want, for example, within say the next 50 years, to have any or all goods currently subject to the Weights & Measures Act to be sold in imperial measurement only?
Tony Bennett
More brickbats, an answer and a question
October 1 2005, 12:30 AM
BERANGER'S BRICKBATS/INSULTS - cont...
Brickbat 1
"Have you been taking your medication?"
Brickbat 2
"As you appear to be unable to understand a simple instruction to look at another post for my answer..."
Brickbat 3
"As usual, Tony, you are seeing everything in black & white".
No bouquets this time, so on to Beranger's question:
BERANGER: "Your turn - Do you want, for example, within say the next 50 years, to have any or all goods currently subject to the Weights & Measures Act to be sold in imperial measurement only?"
I refer the Honourable gentleman to the answer I gave in the list of 12 recommendations on page 4 of the Report by the Customary Measures Society, "Weights and Measures: Britain's Way Ahead":
---------------------------------------------------------------
Main Recommendations
Britain’s Way Ahead: Our 12-point plan
These are our proposals, which we invite the next government to adopt:
1. Loose Goods - Ending of Criminal Penalties
We call for an immediate suspension of all action to enforce
the compulsory weighing and sale of loose goods in metric
2. Repeal of 1994 Regulations
We call for the repeal of the 1994 Units of Measurement Regulations. We also call for an indefinite ‘derogation’ from any other measure in Directive EC/80/181 under which Britain is required to convert to metric units
3. Dual labelling of packaged goods and the re-introduction of ‘dual customary/metric weighing machines
Dual labelling of the weight of packaged goods sold in shops should be introduced within a reasonable lead-in period (goods for export would still, of course, need to comply with the importing country’s require-ments). After a transitional period, displaying metric could be phased out. The cost of adding another measurement on a packet or tin is minimal. Packaged goods in the United States are dual labelled
4. Repeal of the ban on displaying the word ‘pound’ in shops after 2009
We call for the immediate repeal Regulations banning the display of information in pounds and ounces in shops after 31 December 2009
5. Changes in the National Curriculum
We call for the National Curriculum to be amended to ensure that children are taught customary and metric units in equal measure (as is the case in the United States) and are not forced to use only metric in class, e.g. when preparing recipes, making things or drawing up plans
6. Relaxing the ban on customary measures for officials
We call for the immediate relaxation of laws requiring officials to use metric only in official documents
7. Relaxing the ban on customary measures for architects and builders
We call for architects to be allowed, once again, to draw up plans in customary units, and for builders to be able to use customary units
8. Changes to the Highway Code
We call for the next edition of the Highway Code to omit all references to metric measurements, in order to avoid confusion
9. Public information signs to be primarily in customary units
We call for all public information signs, e.g. at the entrance to publicly-owned country parks or historical buildings, to use customary units
10. All swimming pools to show depths in feet and inches
We call for all present and future swimming pools, in the interests of safety, to be required to display depths in customary units. We do not call for an end to displaying depths in metric units. Both should be used
11. Leave road signs in customary measures
We seek a commitment by the government to leave road and footpath signs in customary units indefinitely. Staff in the Department for Transport, currently planning metrication, could be redeployed to useful work
12. Phase out optional metric signs on British roads
We call for the repeal of the current option (currently used only by a handful of local authorities) to allow metric roads signs, in very limited circumstances, to accompany signs in customary units.
BERANGER: "I support the retention of Imperial as supplementary units"
REPLY: So do you support Recommendation 3 of the Customary Weights and measures Society, namely:
Quote
3. Dual labelling of packaged goods and the re-introduction of ‘dual customary/metric weighing machines
Dual labelling of the weight of packaged goods sold in shops should be introduced within a reasonable lead-in period (goods for export would still, of course, need to comply with the importing country’s require-ments). After a transitional period, displaying metric could be phased out. The cost of adding another measurement on a packet or tin is minimal. Packaged goods in the United States are dual labelled
BERANGER: I use miles on a daily basis & have not suggested that I wish to see them replaced with kilometres
REPLY: If I've got your previous answers correct, you'd be happy to see a 'measurement muddle' of a combination of metres and miles on our road signs, yes?
Joe
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 1 2005, 8:32 AM
<<By the way - you may have noticed "metre" (eric) is back.>>
Yeah, he is probably fed up with playing Pokemon by now.
martin
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 1 2005, 9:17 AM
<<
I use miles on a daily basis & have not suggested that I wish to see them replaced with kilometres.
>>
When driving on a UK motorway, I use the small location markers on the sides of the roads (for Steve's benefit, when it is safe to do so) as well as other road signs. These markers are now being replaced by huge signs (M6 in Cheshire for example). These markers are in kilometres. If I use htese signs,I am forced to use both miles and kilometres.
Beranger
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 1 2005, 9:31 PM
Tony asked
"Do you support Recommendation 3 of the Customary Weights and measures Society, namely:
3. Dual labelling of packaged goods and the re-introduction of ‘dual customary/metric weighing machines
Dual labelling of the weight of packaged goods sold in shops should be introduced within a reasonable lead-in period (goods for export would still, of course, need to comply with the importing country’s require-ments). After a transitional period, displaying metric could be phased out. The cost of adding another measurement on a packet or tin is minimal. Packaged goods in the United States are dual labelled"
No. I don't support Recommendation 3.
Dual machines already exist, and hardly anyone uses them. If there is a significant demand to go back to imperial, why are they not more popular? Why do no major supermarket chains use them? Even the supposedly "pro-imperial" Tesco has never used them.
Note that I only said that I suppported the retention of supplementary indications. I would not make it compulsory to mark both imperial & metric.
"After a transitional period, displaying metric could be phased out."
Yet more eradication/obliteration from Tony!
" If I've got your previous answers correct, you'd be happy to see a 'measurement muddle' of a combination of metres and miles on our road signs, yes?"
Well, we have it already - Between my home and my office, I view only 5 traffic signs with distances or speed limits. 3 are metric.
Bud
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 5 2005, 9:18 PM
<<
When driving on a UK motorway, I use the small location markers on the sides of the roads (for Steve's benefit, when it is safe to do so) as well as other road signs. These markers are now being replaced by huge signs (M6 in Cheshire for example). These markers are in kilometres. If I use htese signs,I am forced to use both miles and kilometres.
>>
So Martin, which set of units do you blame? The one that has been there all along, or the one that was introduced recently when there was already no confusion and therefore no apparent reason to do so?
Remember your Magna Carta? There shall be one measure throughout the realm. Well, there was one measure throughout the realm, until they decided to add another one. Now there are two. Therefore, introducing kilometres, and failing to erradicate miles, is a violation of the Magna Carta.
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 9:51 AM
Bud
This point I entirely agree with. If we were having this debate 40 years ago when metrication had not yet begun, I would be much more sympathetic to the argument to leave things as they are.
But in order to rectify the confusion (which you appear to aknowledge - I know many don't on the imperial side) it would be far easier to go wholly to metric than to go back to imperial.
martin
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 12:36 PM
<<
So Martin, which set of units do you blame? The one that has been there all along, or the one that was introduced recently when there was already no confusion and therefore no apparent reason to do so?
>>
Having seen how the conversion was carried out in South Africa over a period of a few months and how the British Government are agonising and procrastinating and leaving the job half-done, I put the blame firstly on the British Government for failing to show any leadership and secondly on opportunists who seek to make political cheap capital out of what is really not a political issue.
Tony Bennett
Who's making 'cheap political capital'? It must be UKMA
October 6 2005, 2:11 PM
re (martin): "I put the blame firstly on the British Government for failing to show any leadership and secondly on opportunists who seek to make political cheap capital out of what is really not a political issue"
REPLY: martin is talking in code, but I am pretty sure that the organisation most closely meeting his criterion: "making political cheap capital out of what is really not a political issue" is the U.K. Metric Association.
Is there a political demand for 1.5 million perfectly usable road signs to be changed?
NO. The only organisation trying to 'make political capital' out of the issue is UKMA with its ludicrous demand that the U.K. must 'obey' a 25-year-old European Directive on weights and measures.
I thought that that Portuguese bloke at the top of the E.U., Jose Manuel de Barroso, was trying to abolish unnecessary euro regulations at the moment?
JohnS-MI
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 2:23 PM
<<Having seen how the conversion was carried out in South Africa over a period of a few months and how the British Government are agonising and procrastinating and leaving the job half-done, I put the blame firstly on the British Government for failing to show any leadership and secondly on opportunists who seek to make political cheap capital out of what is really not a political issue. >>
Well said. Except for changing the names of the guilty, and recognizing we left the job one-quarter done, your comment is completely applicable to the US as well.
kilo-bee
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 3:11 PM
"the British Government are agonising"
I'm not so sure.
My bet is that it has not come up in discussion for decades.
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 3:37 PM
<<<The only organisation trying to 'make political capital' out of the issue is UKMA with its ludicrous demand that the U.K. must 'obey' a 25-year-old European Directive on weights and measures.>>>
UKMA is simply a pressure group. It does not "make demands" or take the law into its own hands. The only organisation/s trying to make it a political issue is BWMA/ARM.
<<<I thought that that Portuguese bloke at the top of the E.U., Jose Manuel de Barroso, was trying to abolish unnecessary euro regulations at the moment?>>>
I certainly hope so. I think the EU has finally realised that unnecessary euro regulations are not wanted by anyone.
JohnS-MI
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 3:49 PM
<<I certainly hope so. I think the EU has finally realised that unnecessary euro regulations are not wanted by anyone.>>
Everyone can agree with that principle, while being in total disagreement as to which are "necessary" and "unnecessary."
kilo-bee
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 4:26 PM
Hey perhaps they'll drop the one's about preventing terrorism and controlling immigration and keep the stuff about bent bananas and weighing scales.
That way they can prove they're in touch with the people's of Europe.
Tony Bennett
Fractions are out, decimals and percentages are in; why don't we move with the times?
October 6 2005, 6:48 PM
re (JohnS-MI): "recognizing we left the job one-quarter done..."
REPLY: Shouldn't that be, er, 25%?
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 6 2005, 7:48 PM
<<REPLY: Shouldn't that be, er, 25%?
>>
Yes, although 25% may imply greater precision than exists in my estimate.
Besides, I thought you liked fractions. :)
Bud
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 7 2005, 5:36 AM
<<
I put the blame firstly on the British Government for failing to show any leadership and secondly on opportunists who seek to make political cheap capital out of what is really not a political issue.
>>
If it is not a political issue, then why don't politicians stop interfering with it?
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 7 2005, 9:44 AM
<<<REPLY: Shouldn't that be, er, 25%?>>>
Why? Whats wrong with a quarter?
Do they not use fractions in metric countries?
martin
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 7 2005, 1:19 PM
<<
Do they not use fractions in metric countries?
>>
They do - usually they are called decimal fractions.
Seriously though, in my work those financial exchanges that insist on using vulgar fractions are a right pain - they cause a lot of problems with data formatting. ALso, if you look at any signposts in metric countries, you will hardly ever (I nearly said never) see vulgar fractions. For example you will see 5.5km, not 5 1/2 km.
Also, if you look at the UNICODE character set (www.unicode.org), you will only see that only a few fractions have a UNICODE value - if my memory serve me correctly they are 1/8, 1/4, 3/8, 1/2, 5/8, 3/4, 7/8, 1/3, 2/3 and maybe 1/6 and 5/6.
Andy
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 7 2005, 2:13 PM
<<<<Seriously though, in my work those financial exchanges that insist on using vulgar fractions are a right pain - they cause a lot of problems with data formatting.>>>
I agree. I've come across that as well - usually only in the US though.
My issue was with Tony for suggesting that simply using the term "a quarter" is not compatible with metric, which of course is ridiculous.
Tony Bennett
Percentages are not very understandable
October 7 2005, 4:27 PM
re (Andy) "My issue was with Tony for suggesting that simply using the term "a quarter" is not compatible with metric, which of course is ridiculous".
REPLY: Not quite what I said - indeed, nothing like what I said - but then I'm used to being misquoted on these boards.
There's a fascinating parallel on this issue concerning road signs concerning steep hills.
In the good old days, we all know where we were.
'1 in 12' was a bit of an incline, '1 in 8' was pretty steep, and '1 in 5' or '1 in 4' for example was very steep.
Then came Europeanisation, and the powers-that-be decided to go over to percentages when signing steep hills.
That has caused confusion in two respects, first because many signs are still in the old '1 in 7' etc. notation (and some authorities are still erecting them), but - more important - percentages are not nearly so well understood as '1 in 6' or whatever*.
Want a clear-cut example?
Despite the fact that over 90% of steep hill signs are now in percentages, when the authorities really want to get a clear message over, like the very steep hill running down off Exmoor just west of Porlock (Porlock Hill), the massive red traffic signs there eschew confusing percentages altogether and goes for: "Extreme danger! Slow! 1 in 4"
Er, just as clear as 6' 1" is over e.g. 186 cm.
Or 8 oz. over 227g or 225g.
Or 9" pizzas over 23cm pizzas.
Or 'half mile' versus 750 metres or 825 metres.
* Ask any female driver how steep a hill signed as 14% is
Stan
Comparing numbers
October 7 2005, 11:23 PM
<<Er, just as clear as 6' 1" is over e.g. 186 cm.
Or 8 oz. over 227g or 225g.
Or 9" pizzas over 23cm pizzas.
Or 'half mile' versus 750 metres or 825 metres.>>
I'm at a loss to understand why you think that two figures punctuated by funny symbols is clearer than a single easily recognisable number like 186
When it comes to distances in metres you can think of it how you like. 750 metres can be thought of as 0.75 km, three quarters of a km or whatever.
And as for this:
<< * Ask any female driver how steep a hill signed as 14% is >>
Once anyone understands the principle of measuring a slope as a percentage then there is no reason in the world why it should be any harder than a ratio expressed as 1:n But if someone doesn't know that then they will naturally be confused by it.
However I don't care much what we do about hill slope signage I'm happy with either, it's not a metrication issue. I realise of course that it *is* an issue for those who see red whenever they see anything to do with "Europe".
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 8 2005, 12:49 PM
"Seriously though, in my work those financial exchanges that insist on using vulgar fractions are a right pain - they cause a lot of problems with data formatting"
What financial exchange still uses fractions? The US was the only one until a few years ago when it changed to decimals.
martin
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 8 2005, 3:35 PM
<<
What financial exchange still uses fractions? The US was the only one until a few years ago when it changed to decimals.
>>
To name a few:
1) London Stock Exchange
2) Bank of England Interest Rate
3) Chicago Board of Trade
Re: Franco Shoes on The World's Tallest Man
October 9 2005, 12:42 AM
You are incorrect Martin. The NYSE and NASDAQ were the last exchanges in the world to decimalize. i also checked with a poster to the USMA site and he had this to say:
All shares in the UK use decimal fractions, not vulgar fractions, and
have done so for several years.
If you look at the London Stock Exchange website, at
www.londonstockexchange.com, there are no vulgar fractions that I can see.
Also the Bank of England base rate I have only seen in decimal
fractions, not vulgar fractions. Maybe many years ago it was not
decimal, but at the moment it is decimal. The BWMA do not have cor