I am not convinced!  One of the criteria needed in driving on the roads is the 
need to provide some form of relationship between speed and distance over time 
we that can relate to.  If distance is measured in km, then speed needs to also 
use km, and km/h is as convenient a measure as any.  

I once wrote to Road and Track (US auto magazine) providing a counter argument 
to technical editor Denis Simonaitis's (I think that is how his name is 
spelled) assertion that imperial measures have some handy 'yardsticks', such as 
60 mph is equal to 1 mile per minute.  My argument was that metric has even 
more (and better):

1.  Urban journeys are generally measured in minutes.  A good urban average is 
60 km/h (equal to 1 km per minute), therefore a journey of say 15 km will take 
15 minutes.
2.  Long distance journeys are generally measured in hours.  A good freeway 
average is 100 km/h, therefore a journey of 450 km will take 4.5 hours.
3.  And a (perhaps slightly over the speed limit) rate of progress on the 
freeway of 120 km/h will mean that the kilometres are slipping by at the rate 
of 2 km per minute - useful in calculating the time to your next exit.

I was quite gratified that Denis devoted a good section of his next article in 
putting my case forward.

I cannot see though how the use of m/s would fit in with any of the above, as 
metres (except in short distances to intersections and the like) are not used 
in measuring travel distances on the roads, and seconds are not used to measure 
time taken.

Regards

John F-L
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Pat Naughtin 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 1:47 AM
  Subject: [USMA:45365] Speed in metres per second


  Dear All,


  I have just been reading this blog at 
http://globonsomeday.blogspot.com/2009/07/improving-metric-system.html where 
they say:


   Another metric unit commonly encountered in everyday usage is the unit of 
speed, kilometres per hour. The official SI base unit for time is seconds, and 
therefore a more appropriate measurement of speed is metres per second. For 
example, 100 km/h is equivalent to 27.78 m/s.



  I wonder if we will ever be ready to embrace the idea of using the SI unit, 
metres per second, for speed in everyday conversations.


  Let's take the example given above with sensible rounding. The speed limit on 
a highway might then become 25 metres per second.


  Other limits might go like this (using Australian examples):


  School zone 40 km/h 10 m/s
  Suburban street 60 km/h 15 m/s
  Main (4 lane) cross town road 70 km/h 20 m/s
  Highway 100 km/h 25 m/s
  Freeway 110 km/h 30 m/s


  It might be interesting to see this idea applied to speed limits in Asia, 
Europe, the UK and the USA.


  Cheers,

  Pat Naughtin
  Author of the forthcoming book, Metrication Leaders Guide. 
  PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
  Geelong, Australia
  Phone: 61 3 5241 2008


  Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped 
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric 
system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands each 
year when buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat provides 
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in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google, NASA, 
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