[QUOTE=MadAmster;39842817]It could be me but that probably isn't what most people on here understood from your wording. The major change was membership and it was 2.5 years when it was judged. VAT, CAP and CFP etc were small (ish?) parts of the very many changes brought about ny the major change i.e. membership.
I'll explain. You wrote
I got it, because I still felt it in 1982 
I started my engineering apprenticeship, having mainly been taught the metric system in school.
However all the old hands there, still worked in yards/feet/inches/pounds/imperial ton etc.
**** me, it was hard to backwards learn. So to me 5 years, is the least of your probalems in letting things settle down.
The treaty of accession to the European Economic Community (EEC), which the United Kingdom joined in 1973, obliged the United Kingdom to incorporate into domestic law all EEC directives, including the use of a prescribed SI-based set of units for many purposes within five years. By 1980 most pre-packaged goods were sold using the prescribed units. Mandatory use of prescribed units for retail sales took effect in 1995 for packaged goods and in 2000 for goods sold loose by weight. The use of "supplementary indications" or alternative units (generally the traditional imperial units formerly used) was originally to have been permitted for only a limited period. That period being extended a number of times due to public resistance, until in 2009 the requirement to ultimately cease use of traditional units alongside metric units was finally removed.
I'll explain. You wrote
One that springs to mind was in 1972 when we joined the EU in the first place. Major incidents such as these take time to settle. [UNQUOTE]
No mention of "knock on effects" like VAT etc. Just "We joined the EU". Hardly surprising that I understood it the way I did.
No mention of "knock on effects" like VAT etc. Just "We joined the EU". Hardly surprising that I understood it the way I did.

I started my engineering apprenticeship, having mainly been taught the metric system in school.
However all the old hands there, still worked in yards/feet/inches/pounds/imperial ton etc.
**** me, it was hard to backwards learn. So to me 5 years, is the least of your probalems in letting things settle down.
The treaty of accession to the European Economic Community (EEC), which the United Kingdom joined in 1973, obliged the United Kingdom to incorporate into domestic law all EEC directives, including the use of a prescribed SI-based set of units for many purposes within five years. By 1980 most pre-packaged goods were sold using the prescribed units. Mandatory use of prescribed units for retail sales took effect in 1995 for packaged goods and in 2000 for goods sold loose by weight. The use of "supplementary indications" or alternative units (generally the traditional imperial units formerly used) was originally to have been permitted for only a limited period. That period being extended a number of times due to public resistance, until in 2009 the requirement to ultimately cease use of traditional units alongside metric units was finally removed.

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