You can rest assured that the laws of physics don’t care whether you measure them in inches or cm.
“Standards for the exact length of an inch have varied in the past, but since the adoption of the international yard during the 1950s and 1960s the inch has been based on the metric system and defined as exactly 25.4 mm.”
The inch you like so much is now defined as a derivative of an SI unit.
That's what I said. The units don't matter as long as they're standardized. Europe's problem is that its a continent filled with various tribes who all speak their own language and uses their own units and whatever as a point of tribal pride. Europe will stay losing as long as they remain tribal and dividided. And this problem only expands over time, as of the present moment Europe is completely propped up by America. They can't defend themselves or build their own things that work.
There's the definition of the inch that you gave (the meaningless "International Yard", which sounds like the spawn of some European bureaucrat) and there's the
true definition of the inch in the context of American engineering. The inch = 1 inch. It's defined to itself, total unity, 1, no decimals. That's what standardization means.
The American Inch is
not exactly 25.4 mm. Its close but not quite. That's what I've been saying about the robust American engineering network, but I get the idea that you have no formal training in metrology and have no idea what I'm talking about
This post was edited by El1te on Mar 7 2025 05:54pm