Poll!!! gallons...UK/US or litres

What is your favourite measure??

  • 0

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 1) UK gallons

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 14

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0

Hels

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Seems to be a bit of a debatable subject....

I personally think, being from England, that litres is least confusing but im sure that everyone has their own opinion!!!
 
I'm not fussed, US gallons are easier to work with online as the vast majority of people online are American but in real life i usually use litres, unless im talking to someone over 30 when i switch to UK gallons.
 
I tend to work with US gallons because you use smaller, rounder numbers, most people in fishkeeping use/know how to use them and they're used for the ich per gallon/whatever guideline. Its a heck of a lot easier to say 'I've got a 100g tank' than it is to say 'I've got a 400 (or whatever it is) litre tank'.
 
not fussed, as long as i know the calculation to convert from each of the units it doesn't bother me.

i'm swapping too and from different units all the time any way.
 
WHat is the difference between UK gallons and US gallons? Why did england switch from UK gallons to liters?
 
I picked US gallons because it seems most people use it, and know it, why try and change it. it just seems easier.
 
Boxcar Muzzdogg said:
WHat is the difference between UK gallons and US gallons? Why did england switch from UK gallons to liters?
UK gallons are bigger. to every US gallon there's 1.20095 UK gallons.

imperial is the old measurements, inches, feet gallons and metric is the the new measurement litres, cetimetres and metres.
 
I like US Gallons, just because thats what I've been taught in school, and thats what I've been using all my life. This is the only place I can think of that I've needed to use other. :dunno:

They also tought us liters and all that junk, but I thought I'd never use it in life, so I didn't listen :dunno:
 
I thought these snippets were helpful:

In 1965, well before we joined the EU, the Government announced the UK would go metric, in line with the global trend in adopting the metric system (including other Commonwealth countries).

When the UK joined the European Community in 1973, we agreed to complete our metric changes by no later than the deadlines to be agreed in EC Directives. A 1989 Directive set a date of 31 December 1999 for all lose goods to be sold in metric measurements.

If the UK remains imperial while the rest of the world has gone metric, UK exporters and packagers are likely to be disadvantaged, especially when trying to sell their goods abroad, which ultimately would be detrimental to the UK economy.

UK DTI FAQ On the Move Metric

One of the earliest types of measurement concerned that of length. These measurements were usually based on parts of the body. A well documented example (the first) is the Egyptian cubit which was derived from the length of the arm from the elbow to the outstretched finger tips. By 2500 BC this had been standardised in a royal master cubit made of black marble (about 52 cm). This cubit was divided into 28 digits (roughly a finger width) which could be further divided into fractional parts, the smallest of these being only just over a millimetre.
In England units of measurement were not properly standardised until the 13th century, though variations (and abuses) continued until long after that. For example, there were three different gallons (ale, wine and corn) up until 1824 when the gallon was standardised.

In the U S A the system of weights and measured first adopted was that of the English, though a few differences came in when decisions were made at the time of standardisation in 1836. For instance, the wine-gallon of 231 cubic inches was used instead of the English one (as defined in 1824) of about 277 cubic inches. The U S A also took as their standard of dry measure the old Winchester bushel of 2150.42 cubic inches, which gave a dry gallon of nearly 269 cubic inches.

Even as late as the middle of the 20th century there were some differences in UK and US measures which were nominally the same. The UK inch measured 2.53998 cm while the US inch was 2.540005 cm. Both were standardised at 2.54 cm in July 1959, though the U S continued to use 'their' value for several years in land surveying work - this too is slowly being metricated.

In France the metric system officially started in June 1799 with the declared intent of being 'For all people, for all time'. The unit of length was the metre which was defined as being one ten-millionth part of a quarter of the earth's circumference. The production of this standard required a very careful survey to be done which took several years. However, as more accurate instruments became available so the 'exactness' of the standard was called into question. Later efforts were directed at finding some absolute standard based on an observable physical phenomenon. Over two centuries this developed into the S I. So maybe their original slogan was more correct than anyone could have foreseen then

A Dictionary of Units - A Brief History of Measurements

Ami
 
I'd like to keep it in gallons, perhaps people could specify which by stating US or UK galls?
 
I voted US gallons, but I can easily use Liters as well. Now that I think about it, until I started with fish, I was more comfortable with liquid measurements in the metric system...I guess that meant I spent way too much time in the science lab.

I honestly still can't tell you anything about quarts or pints. Now who would have guessed that I lived in the US all my life?
 
Boxcar Muzzdogg said:
WHat is the difference between UK gallons and US gallons? Why did england switch from UK gallons to liters?
The EC/EU/EEC (whatever they call themselves thes days) had something to do with it.

I voted litres as least confusing, but as I know the conversion factors, its not hard to work out whatever peeps put.

I find it quite funny that a UK or if properly stated Imperial Gallon is bigger than an American gallon, everyone knows everything in America is bigger, car engines, a big mac for example :D

Jon
 

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