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Old December 30th 11, 12:17 AM posted to uk.transport.london
[email protected] rosenstiel@cix.compulink.co.uk is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Sep 2008
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Default coinage, was bus partitions

In article , (Roland Perry)
wrote:

In message , at
15:11:30 on Thu, 29 Dec 2011,
remarked:
People are still weighed in stone, with 1 stone equalling 14 pounds.


It depends where you're looking. The NHS has been into kilos since at
least when my elder daughter was born in 1986.


I don't recall ever having domestic scales in stone (always pounds),
but perhaps those huge coin-in-the-slot ones in public places were
stones and pounds. The growth charts my children had in the early
90's (they were weighed regularly and the results put in a little red
folder) from the NHS were bi-lingual, in both Kg and Lbs.


I have never yet seen a pounds only scale for weighing people in the UK.

An electronic "bathroom scales" we bought recently for home use shows either
kilos or stones and pounds. The scales where I get weighed regularly at
Addenbrookes only shows kilos.

--
Colin Rosenstiel