0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I was told in high school, last century, that the US was going to switch to the metric system. It makes soooo much sense. Maybe that’s why they didn’t switch for general uses. I mean, the point of water freezing at sea level is zero on the thermometer and 100 at boiling is much easier to think and use.
Somebody told me a few years ago that lumber yards in one part of Canada uses the metric system and lumber yards in the other part of Canada uses the English system.Seven or eight years ago the program in my telephone that converts spoken word into text did simply that. Now it tries to predict what I'm going to say and frequently writes the wrong words. I do not always catch the errors when I'm writing, and afterwards discover lousy errors.
Is a 2x4 actually two inches by four inches?from a Google search:The true measurement of a 2x4 is actually about 1.5″ x 3.5″. When the board is first rough sawn from the log, it is a true 2x4, but the drying process and planning [sic] of the board reduce it to the finished 1.5″ x 3.5″ size. The lumber is then sold as a “2x4” because the cost of the drying and machining are figured in.Tom