You were the one who was agonising over how much it would cost to change speedos, until I pointed out you didn't have to do that at all, unless US motorist are really dumb.
I promise you are mistaken. Quite the opposite, my belief is that it is trivial. You might have misinterpreted one of my posts, and that is understandable because I am sometimes low-key sarcastic. I said something to the effect that changing speedo might double the cost of a Peugot, and that was a joke. And it's not to suggest that Peugots are not well-engineered; it's a reference to the fact they are very economical and small compared to what dominates in the American market for w/e the reasons.
Some posts ago, you were worried about the costs of changing speedos on the
existing fleet of vehicles.
I pointed out it was not necessary, as Americans are smart enough to learn the important equivalent speeds & interpolate the rest, just as Bruce & Sheila did back in the 1970s.
You have since changed your ground slightly.
A major problem with your Camry example is that the Oz Camry would be RHD (in Oz & most countries where we drive on the left, the acronym refers to the side the driver sits on).
Secondly, it would need to meet Australian Design Rules, which, although similar to US ones, differ in a few important details.
Following the end of car making in Australia, it would probably be produced in Thailand, or, perhaps Indonesia, or maybe, even Japan itself, but would be very unlikely to be from the USA, so the dealer in Oz can't get "this exact Red Camry".
As it would be designed from scratch for a RHD country, a likely destination could be Australia, New Zealand, India, Sri Lanka, or South Africa, all of which are Metric countries, there would be no conversion cost.
It sounds like people drive on the left hand side of the road in Australia? That's news to me. (I first used UK as the example, but I realized they drive left side. Australia, too? Ok, you guys are the ones putting real extra costs onto the car industry). But yeah, if the car needs too many changes to even be moved to a different market, then the problem of changing meters is even smaller or you could even say it is nonexistent.
Yep! So does Japan, which made it convenient in the early days of Japanese car sales to Australia, before ADRs came about.
Later, several Japanese companies built cars in this country.
Later still, Toyota, & several other companies decided it was cheaper to have RHD cars built in a LHD SE Asian country, rather than Japan.
There is no extra cost, as the factories are set up from the start to produce distinct versions for different markets.
No meter changing involved.
Of course, if you leave it all to "Ted", it may take a Century or more.
This (changing road signs) is the kind of project where you can very clearly see the beginning. And if you are a politician, you can confidently state where it will end. But then it doesn't. My point was that Ted could conceivably update the ECM on a cargo hold's worth of cars in a day, even though he might not like it.
My point is that Ted doesn't need to.
If you were making cars in the USA using all non-Metric parts then having to pull them apart, change everything to Metric & send them to Oz, it would be costly, but nobody except you is talking about cars.
This is also news to me. I must be reading a different thread?
OK, maybe a bit of hyperbole, but you are quite at home with that, aren't you?
The fact remains that you were one of the first to bring up cars & roadsigns , & have been pushing that barrow pretty hard ever since.
I suppose the existence of imperial causes a lot of grief in the ruler industry? And maybe all the extra ink wasted in printing labels with metric and imperial on them? What was your argument, again?
I can't remember which angle you were playing in this thread, but I do seem to recall that America's continued use of imperial was spoiling your soup. Maybe you can refresh my memory as to your reasons?
Nah! it doesn't bother me------ you must be thinking of six other people.
In the case of the road signs, because, as you were at pains to point out, US citizens are well educated, & able to work seamlessly in both Metric & Customary measures, a longish changeover period would not matter, so ten years sounds reasonable.
Sure. EZ peezy. 10 years to change all our road signs. You have no idea how much highway we have in America. And you don't seem to understand that UK is still not done with their plan made in 1980's?
I googled, & you have approx 7.5 times the length of road we have, whilst at the same time, you have nearly 13 times our population.
It seems to me that your workforce could do it "standing on their heads"!
The USA used to be the "can do" country.
The UK have their own reasons, unfathomable to me.
By the way, nobody rejoiced or held parades when we Metricated, we just did it!
Well, that makes it sound so much more appealing. You get to pat yourSELF on the back? Jolly good job on that. You guys have that part down.
It was pretty much a "nothingburger"-------- nobody was thrilled enough to pat themselves on the back.
If you really want complexity, try measuring stuff in Imperial, then pricing it out in "Pounds, Shillings, & Pence".
Projecting your own country's previous problems onto modern day USA is lots of fun, it seems. If this is not your intent, then I'm also not being a condescending smart-ass and you are just inferring something that is not there.
Not my intention at all -----in fact, a bit out of context.
It was just to point out that the situation when I was a kid was more nightmarish than you could imagine with your rationalised "imperial" system, & of course, Decimal Currency virtually since the inception of the USA.
We had only gone to Decimal Currency 8 years before Metrication.
I notice that many fasteners on vehicles are metric.
For example, on Cummins engines, you use all metric (at least in my experiences).
Yeah. Someone else has already mentioned this. I can't remember the year, but the American auto industry has been completely metric in design stage and fasteners since the early 90's at least. I have only ever owned metric wrenches, myself.