Poopy Head
Seasoned Veteran
Who here can read temperature in Celsius? I can only read Fahrenheit.
Does it really matter which way you read temperature as long as you know how hot or cold something is? :lol:fantanoice said:Yep, because errybody knows celsius is the superior temperature measurement. 😛
That makes no sense.MissTake said:To find Celsius from Fahrenheit is really pretty simple......
Take away 28, then divide by 2
For example,
84°F is 28°C
because 84 - 28 / 2 = 28
You can do it the opposite way around too,
17°C = 62°F
17 x 2 + 28 = 62
..........that's the way I was taught to do it anyway, sometimes it might be 1 degree out, but it's pretty close enough.
I think to do it exactly ....
Here's How:
1. Take the temperature in Celsius and multiply 1.8.
2. Add 32 degrees.
3. The result is degrees Fahrenheit.
or another way is to to this..............
°F to °C Deduct 32, then multiply by 5, then divide by 9
°C to °F Multiply by 9, then divide by 5, then add 32
All these ways are correct but I find the easiest is to do it my way :lol:
Yeah, I learned that by converting as well. I found it difficult to believe at first. I checked it, though, and it's accurate!BrianHay said:I am kind of fortunate as to how learned. I am 36 so here in Canada I was school age when Celsius and the whole metric system was first becoming widely used, I learned both.
I get a big kick out of when people ask just how cold it gets in parts of Canada and I say it is not uncommon for it to get down to -40. Of course they ask what that is in Fahrenheit and most don't believe when I tell them it is the same. That is where the scale balances..... -40 is the same by both measures.
Hiocoie said:That makes no sense.MissTake said:To find Celsius from Fahrenheit is really pretty simple......
Take away 28, then divide by 2
For example,
84°F is 28°C
because 84 - 28 / 2 = 28
You can do it the opposite way around too,
17°C = 62°F
17 x 2 + 28 = 62
..........that's the way I was taught to do it anyway, sometimes it might be 1 degree out, but it's pretty close enough.
I think to do it exactly ....
Here's How:
1. Take the temperature in Celsius and multiply 1.8.
2. Add 32 degrees.
3. The result is degrees Fahrenheit.
or another way is to to this..............
°F to °C Deduct 32, then multiply by 5, then divide by 9
°C to °F Multiply by 9, then divide by 5, then add 32
All these ways are correct but I find the easiest is to do it my way :lol:
Hiocoie said:Wow, thanks. :lol: I'm bad at math
So like if you start with 90 degrees Fahrenheit, and subtract 28 you have 62. Then you divide by two, which makes that 32 degrees Celcius,Please correct me if I'm wrong XD
Okay, I guess you need to be pretty good at math if you can figure that out correctly.
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