Latest observations - 1300 on 21 May 08: UKLocation Weather Temp Wind Vis Pressure / trend
Dir Speed Gust
Belfast (Aldergrove) 13.7 °C SE 19 mph 14 km 1015 hPa, Falling
Cardiff (St Athan) 15.3 °C ESE 13 mph 10 km 1015 hPa, Falling
Edinburgh (Gogarbank) 13.2 °C E 9 mph 24 km 1018 hPa, Falling
London (Heathrow) 17.3 °C E 9 mph 16 km 1016 hPa, Falling
From http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_latest_weather.html
Note, temperature in Celcius, which I'd expect from a nation in the EU, visibility in kilometers, pressure in a sub-unit of Pascals. But note the wind speeds.
Why aren't the wind speeds in km/hr, or maybe meters/second?
Now, I have my misgivings about anything called the 'System Internationale', which sounds like the name of a song sung on May Day.
But, while not as immediately intuitive as feet and gallons, it has its uses. I remember when President Carter tried to impose SI ("metric") units on the country. Other than the 2 liter Coke bottle, it didn't really stick. But I watched enough TV weather when temps were given in Celcius and Farenheit to have gotten a pretty good feel for that. And when I see articles about a 27º heat wave in the UK, well, it is good for a chuckle.
But in college, SI units work better. Other than remembering gravity is 9.8 m/s^2, there is no memorizing. The unit of force, a Newton, is the product of mass and acceleration, or Kg.m/s^2. Work is force by distance, energy adds time, and later, when I started reading the SPC web page daily, helicity has the same units as CAPE. The standard oil field equations are pre-metric, so the Petroleum Engineer's handbook is full of conversion factors, and, as said before, all those conversion factors make one appreciate a system without them.
But back to the original question. Why are UK wind speed obs in miles/hour when everything else is SI?