Actual poster from 1917 that made me laugh. A lot.
Also, those motherfuckers are measuring the weight of those balls in kilograms, arenāt they?
want to fix an american carāhope you have both metric and āstandardā wrenches
I will point out that with the singular and shining exception of lugnuts, at least this one has not been the case since at least the 1970ās. All fasteners on current(ish) American cars are metric nowadays and have been for quite some time. Iāve never seen a single one that isnāt on any car thatās not old enough to qualify for historic plates.
This used to piss off the oldheads to no end back when I managed a hardware store because they would absolutely insist, sometimes literally screaming in my face about it, that their dang old good old boy red blooded American Ford that they just bought didnāt have no Jap pinko metric bolts in it anywhere not nohow, and 100% of the time they were wrong. (This annoyed me only slightly less than the people who showed up needing a bolt, didnāt know what it was, didnāt bring the old one with them, and the only information they had was āI took it off with a 9/16 wrench.ā Hombre, the head size tells me absolutely nothing about the diameter, thread pitch, or length. Then they would claim that itās just a āstandardā bolt, as if thereās any such thing. Also, a 9/16" wrench will usually fairly easily remove a bolt with a 14mm head, so that really tells me nothing. Or 5/8" on 16mm. Etc.)
Harleys, however, take it as some kind of point of pride that they actually do use fractional inch fasteners everywhere.
didnāt know what it was, didnāt bring the old one with them, and the only information they had was
LOL the library equivalent is āiām looking for a book but donāt remember the title or author, but it was about a woman who fell in love, and it had a red cover!ā which describes a not-insignificant percentage of all books in existence
That, and different editions and prints of the same book can and will have different covers.