Quite interesting, I am 60 years old, when I first started school we only learned metric, even our rulers were only marked in centimetres, we were taught not to try converting to imperial all the time as by the time we left school nobody would be using it. It was not until I was about 10 that we started to regularly learn feet and inches in addition. Presumably an educational experiment that quietly went down the pan.
I am 57 and learnt both at school. (Though we were allowed to leave out the questions in rods poles and perches)
Personally I am ambidextrous when it comes to imperial or metric, quit happy working in thous (1/1000") and I am in 1/10mm, although my ^Sd is a bit rusty now
I too can work in both sets of units. When I started work the labourers could not (or pretended they could not) work in metric, so I would end up reading the drawing in mm doing the conversion and telling them what to do in ins.
Tonnes are easy as for all practical purposes 1 Ton = 1 Tonne! That conversion is not too challenging.
As for hectares I worked with someone who said he could never get on with them. We then asked him to estimate an area from the plan. He could not. We then did so in Hectares. He could not understand how we did it until we pointed out that each one of those 100m grid squares on the site plan was 1 hectare. He was converted in an instant as no one could ever do the same for acres!
I am glad I never had to do engineering calculations in imperial units as there are so many factors to include for conversion of units. Engineering is so much easier in SI units.
Also we thought 17.5%
VAT▸ was a pain to work out in metric money, think how difficult it would have been in ^sd!
NR» are changing to metric because all the material is supplied in meters, Tonnes all the designs I deal with are in metric even to the extent that "construction mileage" in meters
is marked out on site. The change has been a slow burn but I feel the time is right to make the move on the railways to metric
However permission to be pedantic. Meters are instruments we use to measure usage of electricity, gas or water and the like. The SI unit of length is the metre. The standard English dictionary of international standardisation is The Oxford English Dictionary not Websters! The Americans might have more claim to set the spelling if they actually used the metre as a unit of measure.