^vk6zgo, lots of interesting stuff there. I am not going to reply to that, yet. You take it too personally and are sensitive, and your post isn't completely wrong. Let's just say making steel and welders don't care cm or inches, and America was among the first of the former Commonwealth to start teaching and learning the metric system, before Australia.
Great you mine ore. Look at the machines you use to mine it. Look at the machines you use for agriculture. Tell me they are all made in Australia?
Fewer & fewer are made in the USA.
If you think you are still the "workshop of the world", have a look at all the "American" cars made in Mexico, or the Toyota "assembly plant" in the USA, you were so proud of some posts back.
I dunno. You guys trade more with EU and China. Maybe the are buying your Australian tractors and tunnel digging machines. We just get your metric glass bottles filled with wine. So are you exporting mining and agricultural technology? Or are you exporting the raw materials and simple products obtained by using pre-existing technology which you imported? Cuz the latter would be much smarter for your country.
My point was that you were completely wrong in your assertion that the GMH plant in Australia was "just an assembly plant".
I pointed out that it made cars "from scratch".
I also pointed out,that during WW2, Australia was largely "left to its own devices", & had to industrialise fast to keep up with the need for war materials.
The fact that this was done, in the majority by people ineligible for military service, many of them being ex soldiers from WW!, with various injuries resulting from that conflict.(My father was one such person, who did double & triple shifts, under the "manpower" legislation of the time, which didn't do his injured leg a lot of good) is quite astounding.
We built ships, planes, Electronics (some of which was supplied to the USA under "Reverse Lend Lease"), guns, munitions, as well as providing our military & your own with food & other services.
Up until the 1980s, Australia produced the vast majority of its everyday products, such as ships, cars, refrigerators, airconditioners & so on, but following the push for 'free trade", local manufacturing was rolled back, until, now, we don't make much at all.
The pioneers of Australian manufacturing would be turning over in their graves!
It's happening to you, too, even if you don't want to recognise the fact.
bsfeechannel:
This argument can be easily refuted by the fact that European countries, Japan, China and other industrialized economies adopted the metric system successfully, but not the US.
Dear genius of geniuses. Germany adopted the metric system in the late 1800's, relatively early in this ascension in tech. Around the same time most of Europe also adopted metric. It might have had something to do with a short French guy consolidating the continent; but he didn't make it to America (apparently, horses don't swim that well). What was high tech in the late 1800's? Britain still ruled the seas with steam engines (that and the sewing machine were two of Britains most important technological achievements). Combustion engines were invented 1876... 4 years after Germany adopted metric. They essentially build their tech in mm. And other countries like Japan, where to you think they traded and bought and copied these tools from? They didn't reinvent wheels in shinto units; they advanced the already metric wheels. (Japan has a lot to do with the advancement in manufacturing of combustion engines esp in the mid-late 1900's... which we know they did this in metric. Back then. They didn't switch after the fact.) Even in America we buy German and Japanese heavy industrial tools and tech. But we also developed these things and have always made these things in America.
A lot of things happened between 1870 and 1960. In Australia a lot of this change was imported; I don't know history that great, maybe you can tell me when Australia was the tip of the technology spear?
We have had our few moments:-
Howard Florey, along with Sir Alexander Fleming, & Ernst Boris Chain jointly received the Nobel Prize in 1945 for the discovery of Penicillin.
Florey was an Australian, but it probably doesn't count as the work was done in another of
rstofer's "low rent " countries.
A trifle more recent was the 2005 Nobel prize for medicine which was received by J Robin Warren & Barry J Marshall for the discovery that peptic ulcers are caused by a bacteria,
Heliobacter pyloriTheir research was carried out in my home city of Perth, Western Australia.
In 2011 the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) developed the Equivac vaccine to protect horses against the deadly Hendra virus.(note that Commonwealth" here refers to the "Commonwealth of Australia"---
not the "British Commonwealth")
CSIRO also holds vital patents for the WIFI technology.
Just a few of the top of my head,----- no "moonshots", but very useful research at top levels.
In characteristic fashion, the Government's reaction was to cut funding to CSIRO.
Was metrication your shining moment of technological progress, is changing their road signs? Of course Australia has little use for imperial anymore. Esp Britain's version. Not just Australia, but the entire rest of the world has not been buying British steam engines and sewing machines for a long time.
Most of the Singer sewing machines I saw growing up were made in the USA---in fact, Isaac Merritt Singer built the first practical & efficient sewing machine in New York, patenting it in 1851.
Singers are probably made in Taiwan, now!
Once the Brits sold a few steam engines, "the genie was out of the bottle", & client countries started making their own.
Australia is buying from metric EU.
Probably much more from "Metric China!"
In America, this century of change happened in inches. They continue to use them, yet America embraced metric before Australia did. They just kept it practical, not symbolic. Americans can buy a pound of butter and still use metric.
Even in UK, people still use a lot of imperial. Australia was kinda unique in how they could completely forget imperial and have no significant effect in their industries/workplaces. They were already buying metric commodities.
If America started changing to 40mm drain pipes and 1 meter wide doors, we be paying cost of market inefficiencies in America for the next 100 years, before it might save a few cents a year. Changing road signs is dead cost, only.
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Our existing technology is important. If we destroyed all of it, today, all the oil wells, all the machinery. All the nuclear power plants. But we kept metric? We would be in the dark ages for centuries. All the easily accessible fossil fuels are gone. We need highly advanced technology to even reach what is left or to re-create nuclear power.
Why would you have to do that?
Metric isn't this "dark god" which is going to, in one fell swoop take away all your equipment made with your "customary measures", but, slowly, over time, new stuff will be made using Metric units.