Jamdiver
Guest
Arnaud:This topic often comes back and I thought I would post a poll to add to the "debate". I was "metric born" but as I'm living in the States, I dive imperial (and hate it) in the US and dive metric in the rest of the world.
A lot of my American friends seem to have a problem understanding that the rest of the world has adopted the metric system. The reason: it's simpler and more precise. There are 1,000 grams in a kilogram, 1,000 meters in a kilometers. Who knows how many feet in a yard? How many yards in a mile? Most don't. Most need a conversation tool to switch from one imperial measure to another. Not with the metric system. On top of it, metric makes it easier to transposing weights and volumes: 100 liters of water is 100 kilos or 0.1 cubic meter. Can you do that with ounces and cubit feet without a piece of paper? Finally, do you know that 1 UK ounce is 0.96076 US ounce? Well, grams are the same all over the world...
According to the US census bureau (blue.census.gov), the world population is 6,257,911,365 while the US population is 284,796,887. That's about only 4.55% of the world population that's still sticking to imperial. Oh, yes, there are two other countries still using the Imperial system: Liberia and Burma, two countries with a stellar record regarding human rights, but that's a whole different debate...
So, are you still Imperial?
Don't forget the difference between a UK gallon (4.546092 litres) and a US gallon which is about 3.5 litres I believe.
I'm comfortable using both metric and imperial especially when it comes to diving.