Hello Michael,

There are a lot of web pages with pipe size tables, but none that I can find 
on American sites have anything that resembles hard-metric.  At least, 
converting from inches to mm never gave a round number in anything I could 
find.

John

Le Mardi 16 Septembre 2003 08:06, Michael Payne a �crit :
> It might surprise you to know that the common copper plumbing pipe sold in
> the US is actually hard metric, cannot remember exactly, I think the 1/2"
> is 15 mm and the 3/4" is 22 mm, it's just called inch size for the benefit
> of Americans, no idea when it happened, but it's definitely hard metric.
>
> Michael Payne
>
> > [Original Message]
> > From: John S. Ward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: U.S. Metric Association <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
>  > Date: 16/9/03 00:04:09
> >
> > Subject: [USMA:26981] To what extent will the U.S. go metric?  (Was A4
>
> paper size...)
>
> > What about pipes, valves, hydraulics, and building materials?  This one
>
> is
>
> > hard to say.  For example, plumbers will be repairing and maintaining
> > existing systems for about a century, so a full set of inches parts will
>
> be
>
> > available.  I predict that plumbing will not convert to hard-metric,
>
> although
>
> > I hope I'm wrong.
> >
> >
> > John
> >
> > Le Lundi 15 Septembre 2003 19:45, Michael Payne a �crit :
> > > I've lived in a number of countries, from memory both Kenya and South
> > > Africa are exclusively A4 paper countries as are probably all countries
>
> in
>
> > > Africa with the close connection all had with Europe. I've also lived
> > > in the Middle East (UAE) where they use A4 and A3 size paper. Here in
> > > the
>
> US
>
> > > many hotels seem to use neither Letter nor Legal size for bills,
>
> obviously
>
> > > getting specially cut paper to their own size. Bell Atlantic (now
>
> Verizon)
>
> > > used to use many sheets of very small paper, now they use some larger
> > > proprietary size, still smaller than letter size, much to my annoyance.
> > > I've found many companies in the US come out with odd paper sizes,
>
> which I
>
> > > normally get as a bill or statement. I'm going to have to measure some
>
> and
>
> > > see exactly how big they are.
> > >
> > > Michael Payne
> > >
> > > > [Original Message]
> > > > From: John S. Ward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > > To: U.S. Metric Association <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > >
> > >  > Date: 11/9/03 23:08:17
> > > >
> > > > Subject: [USMA:26955] A4 paper outside of Europe & Australia?
> > > >
> > > > Hi,
> > > >
> > > > I've already gathered that A4 paper is ubiquitous in Europe and
> > >
> > > Australia, and
> > >
> > > > that "letter" is the standard in North America.
> > > >
> > > > Would those few folks on this list who are NOT from Europe, North
> > >
> > > America, or
> > >
> > > > Australia tell me if the ISO A series paper sizes (e.g., A4) are
>
> standard
>
> > > in
> > >
> > > > your countries?  India?  South America?  Asia?  Africa?  Middle East?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > >
> > > > John
> > >
> > > --- Michael Payne
> > > --- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > --- EarthLink: The #1 provider of the Real Internet.
>
> --- Michael Payne
> --- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> --- EarthLink: The #1 provider of the Real Internet.

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