AussieMark wrote:Scorpion wrote:I would rather use a US based organization that doesn't use an odd way of measuring a cyclone's intensity based on gusts and kilometers per hour.
why would we care tho since kmh is the measurement that is used here.
Imagine the confusion if BOM decided to use mph on the advisories the average person would not know what to expect since kmh is what is used here in Australia.
converting is not difficult anyway
1 kt = 1.15 mph
1 mph = 1.6 kmh
its what I have done for years with tracking Atlantic Hurricanes and talking to u guys converting my terminology into US terminology

I'm rather intrigued that when it comes to things like windspeeds ANYONE uses anything other than kph ( or, perhaps, metres per second) . Sure, we've only had kph as the standard in mainstream Australia since the mid 1970's but the metric system has been the standard international system for scientific matters since 1875.
Heck, the US Congress adopted it as the official US system "except when the use of these units would obviously impair communication or reduce the usefulness of a report" way back in 1901!
104 years is enough time for at least those in the US with an interest in scientific matters like meteorology to get in line with the rest of the world and their own legislature, I reckon!
You can even take it back further. Thomas Jefferson attempted to introduce a variant of the metric system in 1789. In 1866 the international metric system was legally permitted in the US and in 1875 the US became one of the founding signatories of the treaty that established the International System of Units.
I notice that in prominent US scientific publications International units are almost invariably used. Just the amateurs who are reluctant to change, I guess. If the authorities are worried about people not understanding the metric system in warning broadcasts then surely they could just publish both figures for a while (as we did here when I was in my early twenties).
In fact, maybe members on a board like this could help to "lead the way", by standardising on the metric system when discussing such things.
Cheers
Rod