....and I bet you could get a bag of chips and a pint of mild with the change eh?![]()
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Simon
A whole fish supper and a pint of mild.

....and I bet you could get a bag of chips and a pint of mild with the change eh?![]()
![]()
Simon
Yeah, 'cos 92, 61, 92 sounds nowhere near as appealling as 36, 24, 36, does it ?![]()
cheers,
Toddy
being a mechanic I don,t have much option than to swing both way's!
Given he drinks pints of real ale probably the "O God" of over indulgence!Hi Red
Which god are you referring to.......
I'll not be paying a fine at all - I'd be inclined to fine you for the howler in there.God is 6 foot tall and lives 14 miles away. He speaks English (well he would being from Hampshire). He plays cricket and rugby by season and drinks real ale in pints from the wood. Glasses do not have handles and pint tankards are only made in pewter. He measures his weight in stone and his his milk delivered in glass bottles by the pint on the doorstep. Bread comes in 1 and 2 pound loaves. Sweets are bought by the quarter (lb) and horse races are measured in furlongs. Nautical distance is measured only in knots.
If anyone cares to dispute this they must pay a fine of a guinea.
Red
I'm with you there actually. It's always mm for precision. Maybe with the exception of things that come in multiples or simple fractions (down to about 1/8th or 1/16th) of 25.4mm - those tend to get measured in imperial just because it's easier than messing about with points of a milimeter. Unless I just round everything up that is - then, that's not really precision.I have a similar mix up. I'll add that I measure rough lengths in feet and inches, but whenever I need precision I measure in mm!
Yeah, 'cos 92, 61, 92 sounds nowhere near as appealling as 36, 24, 36, does it ?![]()
cheers,
Toddy
I was actually quite shocked when I mentioned stones to an American and they didn't have a clue what I was talking about.equally weighing yourself in stone is not nearly so awful as pounds. I find it odd that in america people hadnt even heard of stones even though its imperial they simply measure in pounds.
Aaah schoolboy errorI'll not be paying a fine at all - I'd be inclined to fine you for the howler in there.
Nautical distance is not mearured in knots. Nautical SPEED is measured in knots...
...1 knot = 1 nautical mile per hour.
Very funny though.![]()
My train journey a in chains.....![]()
Indeed. No biggie though.Aaah schoolboy error.
Both!!!
I often measure things in imperial & metric at the same time.
ie 3mm thick and 10" wide.