Canadian-born Waterloo-trained Mechanical Engineer, here - we alway had to do both - imperial and metric.
Discussion
That's sucks. Who would use imperial versions? ๐
An economy that's highly integrated with the US. Canada is strange that way. I think of long distances in kilometers, but I'm 6'2". Small weights are grams, but I weigh 185lbs. You get really good at conversions. ๐
Yeah, I remember when we officially switched over in the late 70โs. I remember putting transparent decals on my dadโs car speedometer converting miles/ hr to kph. In some ways weโve regressed back to the imperial system. It made me reflect that units of measure are always relative in our minds instead of absolute. Same applies with fiat currency and why sats are so hard to learn on a day to day usage basis. People are more used to relative fiat prices and that wonโt go away soon.
These units in the US doesn't make any sense! Why not use a unit that grows and shrinks by a factor of 10... And Celsius instead of Farenheits... Again factors of 10. And water freezes at 0 and boils at 100... Isn't that simple!? ๐ค๐