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Episode: 1443
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Title: HPR1443: Fahrenheit 0-100
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1443/hpr1443.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:02:34
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---
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Fantastic.
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Hello, this is Bill in Michigan, also known as Bill M.I. in various forums and chats.
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As a big fan of hacker public radio, I invite everyone that gets an inspiration to make
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an episode.
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Hey, if I can do it, anyone can.
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Yes, I had an inspiration.
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It was HPR episode 1432 titled Fahrenheit 212, where Joel and Ken talked about the two
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major temperature scales.
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As an engineer here in the United States, I work in both Fahrenheit and Celsius scales
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with relativities, and at the end I'd like to travel some common temperatures that both
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can relate to.
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My inspiration comes from the huge gap unsaid about the Fahrenheit scale.
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While today its definition may be tied to water, this was not Mr. Fahrenheit's goal.
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I think most historians will agree Mr. F wanted temperature units that did the following.
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He wanted the typical coldest temperature of the year to be zero.
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This is outside temperature now.
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He wanted the typical hottest temperature of the year to be 100.
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Yep, it's that simple.
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Unfortunately, it was defined by a person that was born in 1685 in what's now Gdansk,
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and lived throughout the Dutch Republic.
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For our Celsius friends, here's the detail on Fahrenheit's zero to 100.
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In Celsius, that's minus 17.778 to plus 37.778.
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It's probably a good idea to drop decimals.
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We'll just call that minus 18 to plus 38.
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Now Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit was the inventor of the Mercury in Glass Thermometer, and we
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know how that became the technology to measure temperature for centuries.
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It was the thermometer used for a long time.
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With his thermometer, he was able to accurately measure things rather repeatedly.
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Human body temperature was one of these, outdoor temperature another.
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It may be fact or legend, but it was reported Mr. Fahrenheit used the coldest temperature
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of the winter of 1708, 1709 in Gdansk as his zero.
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He knew what that temperature was on his thermometer, and he wanted that to be zero.
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But Mr. Fahrenheit knew he needed a good reference, otherwise his scale would never be valid, because
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it couldn't be recreated elsewhere.
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He needed some references near his zero and 100 to use his calibration points, or the
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world would never use it.
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In 1724, he published his scale to the world.
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He had come up with a brine solution using ammonium chloride, water, and ice, I guess, and
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to create his zero, and today it's not easily reproduced, but he could reproduce it, apparently.
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He knew the freezing point on his scale of water was 32.
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And he needed something near 100.
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Well, we have a pretty good one, it's called human body temperature is very close to 100
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Fahrenheit.
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Today it's 98.6, but he assigned it to 96.
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After tweaks of the Fahrenheit scales to get things in order later on, long after Mr.
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Fahrenheit was gone, his 96 became 98.6.
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I suspect that he knew that the hottest temperature of the year typically exceeded human body
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temperature, and I think he's probably right in that regard.
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Now Ken, I can turn around your wonderment in a very Fahrenheit way and say, where in
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the world did Celsius get minus 18 and plus 38?
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But I won't do that.
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It turns out the climate here in Michigan matches Mr. Fahrenheit's scale very well.
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Obviously it does depend on where you are in the world.
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I'm sure this Scandinavian countries would think it's a little bit biased as would the
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African countries or here in the United States, we have the extremes of maybe something
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like North Dakota and Florida, they wouldn't think that.
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Here in Michigan, the state of Michigan, our climate pretty much is the coldest temperature
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of the year is around zero.
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And the hottest temperature of the year is around 100 Fahrenheit, of course.
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I would say that we have probably the same climate that Mr. Fahrenheit had.
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So we're lucky in that regard.
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But anyway, think of the Fahrenheit scale as, yeah, if it's above 100, it's pretty darn
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hot, maybe an extreme.
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Even if it's below zero, it's pretty darn cold, possibly an extreme.
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But that's where all this comes from.
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I found an interesting fact regarding Mr. Celsius.
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Evidently he decided that originally proposed that his zero would be the boiling point
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of water and his 100 would be the freezing point of water.
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I guess if he had succeeded in getting that approved, that it would have been a quite
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a different temperature world today.
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Or it's very possible for and I would have nominated it anyway.
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I did find that as I was doing.
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I did a little bit of research for this just to make sure I wasn't way off in left field.
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And Wikipedia is your friend.
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Now Joel and Ken, you did get into absolute temperature scale, where there actually is
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a temperature that cannot be any colder.
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It is zero, where molecular motion, internal energy is in fact zero.
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We did a lab experiment in college that basically found absolute zero in a calorimeter, which
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is a fancy laboratory thermos at temperature of, I'm not sure what we used and I'm not
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sure what we used for the energy, but with no amounts of energy added and subtracted,
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you could plot the points of internal energy versus temperature.
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What's really interesting is this is a perfectly straight line.
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And although we didn't get down there, we could just kind of extend that line and see
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where it crossed the axis to discover what was the temperature when energy became zero.
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We came pretty close.
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A lot of people in the lab have various accuracies, but we were in a laboratory finding what the
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value of absolute zero actually is.
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And not mentioned in the episode, although the Kelvin scale is well known, that's the
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Celsius version, using Celsius degrees in it, of Kelvin.
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The Fahrenheit equivalent of the absolute scale is called Rankin.
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And I noticed looking it up that they put an E on the end of it in some places.
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I never saw it with an E on the end.
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I don't think it's Rankine, it's Rankin and represents the absolute zero.
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The absolute zero in Celsius is, let me get up my little spreadsheet I made here, minus
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273.15 Celsius is absolute zero.
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In Fahrenheit, that's minus 459.67.
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Now on the Kelvin and Rankin scales, of course, by definition, those values are both zero.
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Now let's go up the temperature scale from our absolute zero and see some points of interest.
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One of the first things that comes to mind here is minus 40 Celsius, because that's equal
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to minus 40 Fahrenheit.
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That's where the two common temperature scales cross.
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The next point, of course, is where Fahrenheit is equal to a value zero.
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Zero Fahrenheit, as we stated earlier, is minus 17.778 Celsius.
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Now zero Celsius, as we go up warmer and warmer here, zero Celsius is the freezing point
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of water by definition.
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And today, the freezing point of water is defined to be Fahrenheit equal 32 degrees.
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That's a well-known temperature.
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How about, the Fahrenheit scale, remember, is zero to 100 outdoor temperatures, typical
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where Mr. Fahrenheit lived and so forth.
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Right in the middle is 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
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Here in Michigan, that's a spring or a fall day.
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It's a nice cool brisk with comfortable 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
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What's that in Celsius?
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Exactly 10 degrees Celsius.
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No decimals hidden or anything.
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It's 50 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to 10 degrees Celsius.
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Is that about what your spring and fall days are?
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Some other temperatures come up next, as we go warmer and warmer.
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Let's hit what's typically called room temperature.
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In my engineering stuff, I often hit 25 degrees C.
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Seems to be the world's definition of room temperature, which is a little bit warmer
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than the rooms that I like to be in, but that's 77 Fahrenheit.
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I like it more or let down like 72.
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And if you want to save energy in the winter, maybe 68, but perhaps the 23 degrees Celsius
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is a more accurate room temperature, I see in various specifications, engineering specifications.
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73.4 Fahrenheit is often a better idea of room temperature.
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Let's go up to the next point is human body temperature.
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37 degrees Celsius.
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All my Celsius friends probably know that well.
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That's 98.6 Fahrenheit.
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And originally, Mr. Fahrenheit used 96, but today it's 98.6.
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And I think medical science has even changed that a little bit.
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I think it's a little bit higher now.
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The next thing is Fahrenheit 100.
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Well, we stated earlier that in Celsius, the temperature is 37.778.
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Let's go warmer and warmer and I find one of those points that for some reason has stuck
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with me over the years.
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85 degrees Celsius is equal to 185 degrees Fahrenheit.
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Don't ask me why I remember that, but you can probably see why.
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The next point is the boiling point of water, which is by definition 100 degrees Celsius.
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212 degrees Fahrenheit, both by definitions, I believe.
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The next temperature I run into as an electrical engineer, the value of 125 degrees Celsius,
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is one I run into all the time.
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It's the junction temperature of siliconships, usually of a particular grade.
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It also happens to be a military temperature.
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Anyway, 125 degrees Celsius is 257 degrees Fahrenheit.
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And I know that point well because many of our specifications are in Fahrenheit, it turns
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out with the job that I have right now.
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Anyway, let's keep going.
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The next temperature I'll get to is the temperature of a soldering iron tip that is ready to do work
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on a computer board.
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We usually set that to 700 degrees Fahrenheit.
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That's 371 degrees Celsius, just to give you an idea.
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This worth mentioning is how the Fahrenheit degree, a change of one Fahrenheit degree,
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is a smaller temperature increment than one degree of Celsius.
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The ratio is 9.5 or 5.9 depending on which way you're going.
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You can see that in the freezing and boiling point of water at 32 and 212, which is a 180
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degree change, wherein Celsius, the same change, is 100 degrees.
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So 180 over 100 is 9 over 5, and there's that nice ratio.
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It was actually defined later that Fahrenheit's scale would have exactly 180 degrees between
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those two temperatures.
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Well that wraps up my look at the two temperature scales in use today.
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And I think the chances of the U.S. converting to Celsius is probably about the same chance
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as Brits driving on the right-hand side of the road, instead of the wrong-hand side of
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the road.
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Oh, I had a lot of fun.
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Take care, and thanks for listening all, and thanks again to Hacker Public Radio.
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Bye.
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