Posted on 07/20/2008 9:15:56 PM PDT by bruinbirdman
But according to an article in Van Nostrand's Scientific Magazine, "A Comparison of British and Metric Measurements for Engineering Purposes," a report of the proceedings of the British Society of Civil Engineers, by Arthur Hamilton-Smythe, BA, (you can google it - it's highly amusing) the writer was in France and dealing with some railway matter or other, and the French engineer pulled a two-foot rule out of his pocket!
"Here's a health to every learned man who goes by common-sense,
And would not plague the workingman on any vain pretense.
But as for those philanthropists who'd send us back to school,
Oh, bless their eyes if they ever tries to put down the three-foot rule!"
Even the most stupid eurodummy should be aware that an anagram of hectare is “The Acre!”
Of course, I’m not allowed to sneer at the the sacred altar of the europhile. I’ll probably be clapped in irons just as if I’d had the temerity to sell a pound of bananas.
I just wish these people would go away and leave us alone.
It is weather proof, superbly energy efficient, and quiet. You can heat it with your cook stove, and it cools without AC. Add some water panels on the roof for hot water, and you are ready for the challenge.
As to your original question about mfg lumber. some is good, and some is not... and sometimes you don't know which you are buying. Boards rot too! Any home requires maintenance, and that involves looking into the attic, and behind the stove!
There is no problems with the metric system. We all could have been buying one set of tools since 1978. The metric system does not open boarders. Congress and the President make that mistake.
I was taking about wrenches not screw drivers.
A 37.854 117 84 liter hat. Gotcha.
A lot will depend on the land we wind up buying (we're only in the figuring-out-location stage now) and whether it's suitable for an earth-berm house.
The first house we built was not completely earth-bermed, but it was backed into the hill for insulation purposes (we used tar paper, rubber membrane, and Bentonite on the uphill side, plus a deep gravel trench with silt fabric and large drain pipes). It was passive solar and very efficient -- when I look at our gas and electric bills in our current conventional subdivision house, it makes me want to cry!
I own 8 cars and a motor home. My recent purchase is a 1990 Mecedes 300TE station wagon. Straight six, with 4matic, it requires 93 octane, but gives 17-21 mpg. It runs like a sewing machine and goes wherever. It replaces my 1990 Towncar as the Spotmobile (nothing but luxury, for my dawg!). I have wrenches and sockets for both... but only one torque wrench. I can only think in ft/lbs!
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