It will happen naturally and gradually, without major conversion cost and confusion. Soda comes in 2-liter bottles. Your speedometer reads both English and metric. You'll hardly notice when your 15oz can of tomato sauce grows to a 500g can. Your 'standard' lumber stud already isn't 2 inches by 4 inches. But the 8-foot standard length won't change until changing it offers more benefit than leaving it alone. But I admit, I'll be most happy when English fluid measures go away: teaspoon, tablespoon, cup, pint, quart, and gallon all replaced by the liter. The extra benefit is that liquid measure becomes identical to volume measure, since a milliliter is identical to a cubic centimeter.
2007-04-19 09:34:34
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answer #1
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answered by Frank N 7
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have self assurance it or no longer, the u . s . accompanied the metric device in 1965. the priority is, Congress on no account funded the transition, nor did it make the transition necessary. What the government needed replaced into for marketplace forces to make the differences for them. it incredibly is a humorous ingredient approximately individuals; on one point, individuals are consistently searching for the "New and more suitable" in each and every thing. yet individuals additionally get caught in ruts. The Imperial device is merely certainly one of those ruts (like the layout of the distant places money) that individuals are caught in. yet worry no longer, differences are occurring, nevertheless ever so slowly. One occasion is present in packaging. in case you pick to purchase a extensive field of sentimental drink you could desire to purchase a "2 Liter" bottle. individuals are slowly getting acquainted with questioning in metric; and for my section, as this century progresses, you will see further and extra differences. In some areas of the country, highway symptoms are already twin marked in miles and kilometers. this is purely a rely of time.
2016-12-26 14:53:40
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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"Ever". is an awful long time. That's impossible to know, however it is unlikely it will in the foreseeable future. It is used in some places already though. As an example, because my company furnished products sold overseas, we were forced to use it when our blueprints were converted to metric. This was over twenty years ago. Ever? who knows
2007-04-19 03:00:06
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answer #3
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answered by Zeke 3
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It seems unlikely atleast for another ten years. But U.S.A's not changing to to metric system has not caused any major problems so far.
2007-04-19 02:45:27
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answer #4
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answered by cidyah 7
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We already have. It was made the official standard many years ago. But it was never enforced, and people kept on using the english system of measurements.
2007-04-19 02:44:50
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answer #5
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answered by Ralfcoder 7
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no, it was tried but failed. even the government trying to mandate it has failed.
2007-04-19 02:43:48
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answer #6
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answered by minorchord2000 6
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no
2007-04-19 02:42:20
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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