• @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    I may be biased, but I think it kinda makes sense. All the fractions are really just powers of two:
    One half
    One quarter
    One eighth
    One sixteenth
    One thirtysecond
    etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      231 year ago

      Oh yeah, totally makes more sense to say “it’s 3/64ths of an inch” than “it’s 2 millimeters.” Completely reasonable.

      So reasonable, in fact, that in most manufacturing that still uses imperial measurements they long ago abandoned fractions and moved to decimal inches.

      Which leads to unholy abominations such as the wood shop sending over “cut off 3/64ths” and the metal shop cutting off 0.046875".

        • @msage
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          51 year ago

          Daily reminder that imperial comes from the word ‘imperium’, which had nothing to do with the US of A.

          A partial quote from Wiki: “imperial units (also known as British Imperial)”

    • @Coehl
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      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      And all of the fractions in metric are just powers of 10: one tenth, one hundredth, one thousand. Powers of two are great when you’re working in base 2. It’s a big hassle when you’re working in base 10.

      Everyone also gravitates to length and how fractional powers of two are sensible. I’ll grant that they’re at least sensible although awkward in base 10. But what about every single other thing? For lengths greater than one inch, there’s no consistent pattern. For volumes there’s no pattern - mass, weight, etc. The thing is a monstrosity. People pick out one part that’s halfway acceptable and act like that’s a defense of the rest of the pile of garbage.