Hot Tub Forum

Original => Hot Tub Forum => Topic started by: wmccall on December 14, 2007, 09:59:25 am

Title: For Canadians only
Post by: wmccall on December 14, 2007, 09:59:25 am
Of course I can't stop anyone from voting, but anyone is free to join the dicussion.   I was talking to a Canadian on the phone today aboot his hot tub and was suprised it read out in Fahrenheit.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Helios on December 14, 2007, 10:26:20 am
I use Fahrenheit but my Coast can display in either Fahrenheit or Celcuis.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Pathfinder on December 14, 2007, 10:42:27 am
We also measure everything in inches and feet  its only the government that uses centimeters & meters.  Its kind of dumb  our drivers licenses have height measured in cm but if you ask anyone how tall they are they'll tell you in feet & inches.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Helios on December 14, 2007, 11:50:39 am
Quote
We also measure everything in inches and feet  its only the government that uses centimeters & meters.  Its kind of dumb  our drivers licenses have height measured in cm but if you ask anyone how tall they are they'll tell you in feet & inches.

Except our weight because kilograms sounds lighter than pounds.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Dr. Spa™ Ret. on December 14, 2007, 12:56:38 pm
Ya know Bil, until I submit my vote I can't see the results  >:(

Too bad there isn't a third choice of, "I'm not Canadian"
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: wmccall on December 14, 2007, 01:08:33 pm
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Ya know Bil, until I submit my vote I can't see the results  >:(

Too bad there isn't a third choice of, "I'm not Canadian"


No need to get angry!    Good idea.  There is now a Dr Spa option.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Spatech_tuo on December 14, 2007, 01:53:37 pm
Celsius in Canada? This is North America, not Europe!!!

Get with the program my Canuck friends!!!
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: wmccall on December 14, 2007, 01:58:53 pm
Quote
We also measure everything in inches and feet  its only the government that uses centimeters & meters.  Its kind of dumb  our drivers licenses have height measured in cm but if you ask anyone how tall they are they'll tell you in feet & inches.


But do you do Kilometers since all the road signs are listed that way?  I assume you check your speed in kmh when a mounty passes by.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Dr. Spa™ Ret. on December 14, 2007, 03:16:49 pm
Years ago when I was in Barbados, the road signs were in Kilometers per hour, it wasn't until I was going around a corner, under the posted speed limit, UP ON TWO WHEELS, that I realized the speedometers were in MILES per hour.



just thought I'd share  ::)
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Tom on December 14, 2007, 04:52:48 pm
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anyone is free to join the dicussion.   I was talking to a Canadian on the phone today aboot his hot tub and was suprised it read out in Fahrenheit.

Arctic Spas readouts can be set to Celsius or Fahrenheit.  So your poll needs an "either or" choice.

And a boot is something you wear on your foot.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Tom on December 14, 2007, 05:12:52 pm
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We also measure everything in inches and feet  its only the government that uses centimeters & meters.  Its kind of dumb  our drivers licenses have height measured in cm but if you ask anyone how tall they are they'll tell you in feet & inches.
Depends.   I built a house using metric blueprints and lumber and had no trouble at all. It was only because of the need for trade with the foot-dragging US of A that the Canadian lumber industry switched back to Imperial measure.  The agriculture industry is mired in acres, but the retail food industry seems widely metric.

I asked my doctor why he still measured my height and mass in Imperial.  "Do you know how much one of these scales costs?" he retorted.  " Besides, the computer automatically converts the results."

So, yes, if you ask my height and weight, I'll tell you in imperial but if pressed could tell you I am 170 cm tall and 72 kg mass.  I just asked my son in the next office if he knew his height and mass in metric, and he did.   Hmm, just checked my license, it says 73 kg.  Guess I've lost weight.  :)

My wife and I spent a year in Europe in 1973 and became so accustomed to metric measures that for the first few weeks back in Canada, we had trouble ordering sliced meat in a deli (uh, we want 150 grams, how many ounces is that?).  

My wife is a nurse, and medicine worldwide is metric.  I have a BSc and have done research work -- all in metric, the measurement system of international science.  Having used SI (Système International, the official world 'metric' system) for most of our lives, we wouldn't want to go back to the cumbersome system of Imperial measure.

Vive le monde métrique!
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: In Canada eh on December 14, 2007, 05:21:35 pm
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Celsius in Canada? This is North America, not Europe!!!

Get with the program my Canuck friends!!!


Spatech,

   Its actually only the U.S. that still uses the old imperial measurements, the rest of the world uses metric.  I do have to admit that living in Southwestern Ontario is probably the most confusing part of all Canada.  The American influence is very strong here so we are use to both imperial and metric, its only a problem when you confuse the two, just ask NASA ;D
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Tom on December 14, 2007, 05:41:28 pm
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Get with the program my Canuck friends!!!
The US of A has been officially metric since 1866, according to http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/usmetric.htm yet it seems to be the only major country that does not use SI in daily affairs.

Get with the program, my American friends, it is you who are out of step with the rest of the world.  ;D
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: wmccall on December 14, 2007, 06:23:35 pm
Quote

Arctic Spas readouts can be set to Celsius or Fahrenheit.  So your poll needs an "either or" choice.

And a boot is something you wear on your foot.


Perhaps I didn't word it right, I didn't mean what your spa is capable of, but how you use it.  If my sister in law sits on the display unit of my spa, it switches to metric and then I have to find my manual and figure out how to change it back.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Spatech_tuo on December 14, 2007, 06:38:40 pm
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Spatech,

   Its actually only the U.S. that still uses the old imperial measurements, the rest of the world uses metric.  I do have to admit that living in Southwestern Ontario is probably the most confusing part of all Canada.  The American influence is very strong here so we are use to both imperial and metric, its only a problem when you confuse the two, just ask NASA ;D

Do you go by Metric time in Southwestern Ontario as well?
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: In Canada eh on December 14, 2007, 06:44:54 pm
Quote

Do you go by Metric time in Southwestern Ontario as well?


Actually yes but only half and half.  I have to record stuff at work in 24 hour or "metric" time but I still prefer to use 12 hour time measurement
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Spatech_tuo on December 14, 2007, 06:48:30 pm
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Actually yes but only half and half.  I have to record stuff at work in 24 hour or "metric" time but I still prefer to use 12 hour time measurement

I always hated it in my younger days when I'd be in Canada at a bar and someone would say "it's 9:99, 1 minute until midnight"! ;)
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Cola on December 15, 2007, 09:47:14 am
The Big 3 (GM Ford and Chrysler) all use metric.  Most of our local tool mold and die shops convetrt to imperial during the tool build and then convert back to metric during the tool checking stage.  In the Windsor area, we have a huge Detroit television and radio influence and use imperial temperature for the most part.  My friends in the Toronto area use metric for the most part.  My Family in Quebec uses metric exclusively.
My hot tub is Farenheit

Steve

BTW, Hi Boni and Merry Christmas to all.
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Tom on December 17, 2007, 10:39:54 am
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I always hated it in my younger days when I'd be in Canada at a bar and someone would say "it's 9:99, 1 minute until midnight"! ;)

LOL.   Neither metric nor decimal time ever caught on, not even with the French revolutionaries.  

Anybody remember 'swatch time'? Some other systems have evidently found some acceptance.  http://www.decimaltime.hynes.net/metric.html has a discussion of various "metric" and other time and date systems.  

I still prefer the unambiguous 2007/10/05 14:52:36  to the confusing  5/10/07 (is that May 10, or Oct. 5? Depends on who you ask!)  Given a time of 2:52 -  Is that 2 in the morning or 2 in the afternoon?  If the a.m. or p.m designation is missing, you have no way of knowing
Title: Re: For Canadians only
Post by: Chas on December 17, 2007, 07:42:34 pm
HotSpring tubs can be set to read out in C or F - and they will not change back even if Bill's sister in law sits on the control panel - there is a jumper in the control box.

 8-)