Yeah, honestly I'm usually so tired of the imperial VS metric debate (I know metric is better and I wish the US used it, it's just a low priority), but drill bit sizes are so stupid.
I like inches, I like the size of 1/8th" it's suitable to my needs. I like the scale on the ruler, my eyes can instantly tell what I'm measuring because each tick is a different length. It works for me, it jives with my tools, I will not buy new rulers.
I would happily throw out all my drill bits and switch to numbered ones or metric, I don't care. Fractions for hole size is dumb. I'll also happily throw out all my imperial sockets and wrenches and switch to one kind of nut. Having two standards of the same tool just sells more socket sets. Which was probably the point.
If only they'd made a metre equal a yard, then everyone would be bilingual and we wouldn't have to fight. You could use the one that was appropriate for the job.
Since 2000, they've used all-American steel vs. our quarters, which are copper at the core. PS: I don't really know if the Canadian quarter's steel is all-American, I just like the ambiguity of the statement.
You actually can't be mad about this one. This is effectively binary which you use all the time without knowing it. And even worse, proper SI notation has jacked up binary hardcore.
1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32... You won't find a 1/12 or some other number.
Maybe that's why I couldn't tell if a gigabyte has 1000 megabytes or 1024. People keep telling me one or the other. Others keep telling me that there's 1024 mebibytes in 1 gibibyte, but those names absolutely suck.
Depends for what. Still better than random scales like 3, 12, 1760 and units that don't mean anything like hundredweight, which isn't even one hundred anything, unless it is because you live in another part of the world where the same word means a totally different thing.
Because a lot of imperial measurements revolved around being able to be divided by 4, and occasionally 3 at times.
For instance the cooking unit of measurments are in 4's or base 2 in a way (e.g 1 gallon = 4 quarts = 8 pints = 16 cups = 128 ounces)
We still see 4s or 3s irl regardless of measurement system. Doughnuts are often prepared in dozens and virtually never in 10s. Do we walk around claiming why bakers hate 10 step counting?
Time is the example of something designed around 3/4 and didn't change. 60 is divisiable by both 4 (15) and 3 (20) and is not base 10, but people can accept that.
Time is the example of something designed around 3/4 and didn’t change. 60 is divisiable by both 4 (15) and 3 (20) and is not base 10, but people can accept that.
Using 12 and 16 makes for easier maths (pre-calculators). It's easier to divide and get an integer. With easy access to calculators and highly precise measurements (especially digital systems) metric makes more sense and is easier to interpret quickly.
Ten mil spanner is fuckin ten mil spanner and you have three in your toolbox and only someone who was starved of oxygen at birth uses imperial spanners wtf is this 🥲
Car manufacturers in the US like to throw metric and SAE at you. Just to keep you on your toes I guess.
Ironically, it's always the wrench you DIDN'T bring with you.
Hexagon socket screws are often used because they are easier to loosen when the screws are very tight. I think in such a case you can't get any further with a Phillips screwdriver.
Even more ridiculous is that they could have just made everything one fraction. Like 1/10 then 2/10 then 3/10. This crap is over complicated by it's own rules.
Theres 2 pretty good reasons why I only ever have 1 fractional wrench at a time. One so I can just move up the line until one fits and the other reason is that fractional is not used in modern cars. I only ever need to break my imperial set out when I'm working on a antique car.
I'm not an aerospace mechanic, but I do have some insight.
The formula in the image is incorrect. It depicts 7/16" - 10 cents = 10 mm, not plus. Notice that 7/16" indicates the gap in the wrench, and the dime makes that gap smaller.
Now that that is out of the way, it seems that a dime is 1.35 mm (I love that American currency is specified in metric). So, 7/16" - 10 cents = 9.7625 mm. So, pretty damn close to 10 mm.