I feel like DIY stuff would be easier with metric. How big is the hole? Will my bolt fit through it? Well it's a #8 bolt and the hole is is 5/8" diameter... So let's look up the diameter of a #8 which is apparently 5/32, so 5/8" is 20/32" so that should work, but also there's 1/4" x 20 types which are easier to read but why do we have two standards for this... And now what very odd drill bit do I need to make the hole for the threaded insert? 11/64? 5/32? Well the insert is 0.24825184" in diameter so...
Or the hole is 10mm, so anything that's M10 or smaller will probably fit through it, and the correct threaded insert will match the M#, and the required drill bit will also be easy to pick. So now when I order parts cause actual stores never have anything good I know what to get.
As for stock material, why do we not just stop measuring wrong? If we know the nominal and actual dimensions, why not just offset your blade or fence, mold or whatever by the difference and produce the actual part you want?
Also lol about arguing about science units. It doesn't matter, they're all silly results of calculations and 99% of people don't care or need to know, nor is it important to have the same mental estimation of them as we do with length, weight or volume. Like wtf are you people doing in your kitchens? Let me get my 4 decimal place thermocouple and temp controller to cook this tea at precisely 98.4352 degrees C ramped at 2C/min, accounting for the pressure in Denver being however many pascals it might be so we don't boil away our tea and deviate from the optimum 2.1 molar tea concentration...
Pretty sure most people just see bubbles or a rolling boil and throw the macaroni or tea bags in.
**This post was edited on Feb 15th 2022 at 12:44:24pm