Cooter Brown
Member
I've used both in work situations and frankly prefer standard.
In cabinetmaking I try to work within a 1/32" tolerance. A millimeter is larger than 1/32"--1/32" is about .8mm. It's more accurate when working with rules etc. you can actually see.
The standard system is also more intuitive. Draw a line. Divide it in half. Divide each of those segments in half. Now divide each of those sections in half, and so on. You have quarters, eighths, sixteenths, thirty-seconds, etc.
It's the way the mind works. The mind doesn't work in tenths. At least mine doesn't.
I'm not a super high end woodworker, but I know a few. They could all work with metric measurements if they wanted to, but I don't know any that do, including some European transplants.
Of course with metric the math is generally easier. For a lot of engineering applications metric is probably superior. That's why I have a calculator that does fractions...
As far as wrenches etc., I don't mind having both--you'll never hear me complaining about having too many tools! And since fasteners are hardly ever marked anyway, I'm still stuck with trying them til one fits!
In cabinetmaking I try to work within a 1/32" tolerance. A millimeter is larger than 1/32"--1/32" is about .8mm. It's more accurate when working with rules etc. you can actually see.
The standard system is also more intuitive. Draw a line. Divide it in half. Divide each of those segments in half. Now divide each of those sections in half, and so on. You have quarters, eighths, sixteenths, thirty-seconds, etc.
It's the way the mind works. The mind doesn't work in tenths. At least mine doesn't.
I'm not a super high end woodworker, but I know a few. They could all work with metric measurements if they wanted to, but I don't know any that do, including some European transplants.
Of course with metric the math is generally easier. For a lot of engineering applications metric is probably superior. That's why I have a calculator that does fractions...
As far as wrenches etc., I don't mind having both--you'll never hear me complaining about having too many tools! And since fasteners are hardly ever marked anyway, I'm still stuck with trying them til one fits!
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