Someone on Cix was surprised by a water bill which he calculated meant he was using 200 pints of water a day.
Picturing a pint is not difficult – we can see it in terms of beer or milk. But tell someone they have a 210 litre hot water tank or that a washing machine uses 60 litres of water per wash, and they flounder a bit.
Here are some handy comparisons:
1 litre = 2 pints
10 litres = a toilet flush = bucket of water
A power shower is using the equivalent of having a bucket of water thrown over you every thirty seconds. So if you wallow under the hot water every morning, and you have a powerful shower, you may actually be using far more water than if you had a bath.
60 litres = a washing machine cycle = a water butt
240 litres = a wheelie bin = (roughly) a modern hot water tank
Any more? UMRA will be particularly interested in sightings of unorthodox units like “swimming-pools per minute” and so on.
On a similar note, I was very amused by someone on the Today programme a few days ago describing the proliferation of data storage in the world over the past decades in terms of Duvet Covers. He started off with a very reasonable sounding quilt of 1000×1000 stitches representing a megabyte. And ended up describing 3 duvet covers each capable of containing the entire planet.
At which point I began to wonder if Chris Morris had infiltrated the studio…
I have passed that one on, I’m sure will go down well!