On 01/02/19 11:28, Kevin Kenny wrote:

I wonder whether we are arguing hypotheticals here.

Well long tones (lt) helps explain short tons.

Both lbs and kg appear in the data base .. so I'll add them.

So do 'person', I assume for a lift/elevator. Add that too.
There are some strange units ..example 'm' ?


Is there still highway signage, anywhere, with weight limits in long
tons? I don't know, but I'd have imagined that the UK would have gone
to metric signs a long time ago. (I imagine that there are still
historic bridges with the old placards on them - but that's like
coding '5 shillings fine for driving a waggon across this bridge at a
pace faster than a walk' on the old placard.)

I've traveled the US fairly extensively, and I've never seen a traffic
sign in cwt. (Or indeed, anything else, although I understand that
it's still a unit in wholesale commerce of some goods.) Instead of
saying '30 cwt', a load sign here would say '1.5 tons' or '1½ tons' or
'3000 lbs'.

There are 2 in the data base with 30 cwt ...

Way403519212 <https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/403519212>

Way91738326 <https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/91738326>

Both in the UK and both parking areas.

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