daveshoot
Silver Member
I was in the cold war Army in Germany, where we had to be cooperative with our Euro allies.
We used metric for distance, but feet for elevation. A hill was x kilometers away, but the hill was yyy feet high. I don't know who thought this up; not an aviator, I would guess.
I got used to metric (you know the cool kids call it "SI" for Standard International) for everything but temperature. It just never felt 21 C out in summer when my skin said it was 70.
And I always enjoyed explaining to Germans why a 12 ga. shotgun is bigger than a 20....
We used metric for distance, but feet for elevation. A hill was x kilometers away, but the hill was yyy feet high. I don't know who thought this up; not an aviator, I would guess.
I got used to metric (you know the cool kids call it "SI" for Standard International) for everything but temperature. It just never felt 21 C out in summer when my skin said it was 70.
And I always enjoyed explaining to Germans why a 12 ga. shotgun is bigger than a 20....