Sailing and Cars
In article , Mys Terry
wrote:
On Wed, 10 May 2006 22:15:46 GMT, "Maxprop" wrote:
"Peter Wiley" wrote in message
...
In article , Frank
Boettcher wrote:
On Tue, 09 May 2006 04:17:36 +0100, Peter Wiley
wrote:
In article et,
Maxprop wrote:
You might try Vermont--I hear they love Subarus up there, especially
those
horrid things with the flat-four engines.
Umm, Max - every Subaru I've ever seen has had either a flat 4 or a
flat 6. Do they sell something else in the USA?
Vested interest - I have a Liberty AWD sedan (Legacy to you guys) and I
like it. It starts, runs, is comfortable and reasonably quiet. Mileage
is OK and at 230K, I expect to get at least another 100K out of it yet.
Never seen a Tribeca here but from the pix, looks a bit better than a
WRX. That's damning with faint praise :-)
PDW
Kilometers?
Well, of course. Doesn't everyone use the metric system?
The USA began the switch to the metric system some decades back, but gave up
the idea due to cost. Too bad. Now we have both systems--British and
metric, and I have to have two sets of wrenches and sockets, not to mention
speedometers that read in both systems.
Max
We do not use "British" and Metric. We use S.A.E. and metric. The British came
up with a system that is worse than their teeth or their cusine, known as
"Whitworth".
Actually an engineer named Whitworth came up with Whitworth, known as
British Standard Whitworth later on. SAE - society of American
Engineers - was a Johnny come lately and they *still* managed to create
1/2-13, which has to take the prize for one of the most stupid thread
pitches of all time.
It's sort of the metric system expressed in fractions.
Wrong, but that's expected.
PDW
|