chilliMin Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Morning all What are the best (i.e. easiest) units to use for a UK build? With particular reference to concrete and steel fabrication?
Crofter Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Metric all the way. Steel is sold in 6m lengths. Concrete by the cubic metre.
saveasteading Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago The only time I use imperial is in chat with someone aged over 45. Then you might describe a timber in inches. Eg 6 x 2 It's actually much more practical than describing it as 150 x 50, or 15 x 5. Or 147 x 47 etc. Or nails being 3 inches. But it would still be a length in metres in ordering and in cutting. It would be a very bad idea to design and work in imperial. Steel beam dimensions are actually usually still in the historic round numbers in inches but are now always calculated and bought in mm.
markc Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago A guy I used to work with was ok in metric as long as they were whole numbers in 100mm increments - everything else was an imperial add-on. 3500mm - 3.5m 3600mm - 3.6m 3612mm - 3.6m and 1/2 inch it made setting out conversations interesting to others.
Crofter Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Just now, markc said: A guy I used to work with was ok in metric as long as they were whole numbers in 100mm increments - everything else was an imperial add-on. 3500mm - 3.5m 3600mm - 3.6m 3612mm - 3.6m and 1/2 inch it made setting out conversations interesting to others. On a related note, I know a guy who insists that a 3-4-5 right angle triangle only works if it's in feet. 1
JohnMo Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 19 minutes ago, saveasteading said: The only time I use imperial is in chat with someone aged over 45. Why - I'm over 60 and was taught metric at school, it's been taught in school since about 1965! Only time since leaving I used imperial was working with equipment designed in 1940s. And ordering wood in imperial cross section (which it isn't actually that size - 147mm is actually 5.79" not 6") and metric length - but building industry is backwards in its thinking anyway, so cannot expect much different really.
Crofter Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 4 minutes ago, JohnMo said: Why - I'm over 60 and was taught metric at school, it's been taught in school since about 1965! Only time since leaving I used imperial was working with equipment designed in 1940s. And ordering wood in imperial cross section (which it isn't actually that size - 147mm is actually 5.79" not 6") and metric length - but building industry is backwards in its thinking anyway, so cannot expect much different really. I'm 44 and we didn't mention imperial units once at school. For me, imperial is used for certain specific things e.g.: - socket drives - wheel diameters - length of a boat
Mr Punter Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago The US and Canada like imperial. Timber frame with studs at 2 ft centres, timber sheet material being 8' x 4'. It can make it easy to set out. I doubt many use imperial weights, other than for people eg 5 foot 8 and 18 stone = fat bastard etc.
Crofter Posted 51 minutes ago Posted 51 minutes ago 1 minute ago, Mr Punter said: The US and Canada like imperial. Timber frame with studs at 2 ft centres, timber sheet material being 8' x 4'. It can make it easy to set out. I doubt many use imperial weights, other than for people eg 5 foot 8 and 18 stone = fat bastard etc. You can still buy sheet material in either metric or imperial in the UK. That was a surprise to me when I was designing my house. Except they call it 1220mm, not 4ft.
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