back to article Fancy nipping for a quick two-thirds of a pint?

Here's some splendid news for those of you who can't in all conscience go into a boozer and ask for a half, but reckon that a full pint might hamper your post-Friday-lunchtime workplace performance: The National Weights and Measures Laboratory (NWML) is proposing to introduce a two-thirds of a pint measure which would "increase …

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  1. Strappy
    Thumb Up

    It's a lady's glass!

    Years ago (about 20 or so - I'm old), I worked in a holiday camp bar and there were three common sizes of beers: pint (20fl/oz), half-pint (10fl/oz) and a half served in a lady's glass (Wellington or 12fl/oz).

    Nice to see that there's still no such thing as a new idea.

  2. Jimmy Floyd

    At the risk of going all metric on this...

    ...it's the difference of 189ml (or 6.65 fl. oz, a unit of measure I've never understood - surely that's confusing volume with mass?)

    While the idea is good on paper, as 2/3 of a pint is a pleasantly quaffable measure, if 200ml makes that much difference to your level of soberness then you really should stick with cranberry juice.

  3. Paul

    Sounds like a good idea...

    A pint can feal like a big drink at lunch, but a half always feels stupidly small. Also very good for stron Cider. 2 pints of Old Rosy is a baaadddd idea.

  4. Mike Crawshaw
    Thumb Down

    WTF?

    I mean, seriously, WTF?

    You can already buy beer in:

    half-pint glass

    pint glass

    330ml bottle (c0.58pts)

    500ml bottle (c0.88 pts)

    and now they want a 0.67pts measure too? No. If you're not manly enough to down a pint, buy a 500ml bottle, and leave a bit in the bottom, muttering about it not being "right".

    Besides, it's not very manly to walk into a bar and shout "WENCH! TWO-THIRDS OF A PINT!!!"

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    In that case

    can we has a 2 pint measure for those pubs that are so understaffed you queue for a hour to get severed (not that I attended those crap places anymore)

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Why

    would you order beer of a friday lunchtime in any quantity other than a gallon??

    2/3 of a pint indeed, we need a house of commons committee to investigate the possibility of outlawing the pint glass and making 2 litre steins compulsory.

    Efros

  7. A J Stiles
    Boffin

    Why not 330 ml?

    Why do we still have to have 568ml beer glasses anyway? Why not a nice round 500? Other countries seem to manage fine with beer in measures of 250ml, 330ml and 500ml.

    Furthermore, by marking a line on a 568ml glass with a simple diamond-tipped tool, a 500ml glass with a 13.6% oversize can be created. This operation can be performed as glasses are being collected for washing, so will take precious little time to implement in practice.

    Of course, since the new measures would be smaller than the old, it should be mandatory for pubs to display posters showing how prices are converted. The unfair practice of charging more for two separate halves than for one pint could be outlawed at the same time.

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    (untitled)

    Not April is it ?

    So the thought of 1/6th of a pint less is just too much to contemplate ?

  9. Dan

    Sounds like an australian schooner

    I recently visited australia where they already have a beer size in between a pint and a middy (half) called a schooner. I think its more like 3/4 of a pint rather than 2/3.

  10. Andy
    Unhappy

    shifty measures

    so in otherwords, its an excuse for brewery's to shift 2/3 pint measures for full pint prices.

    put it in a fancy galss and no one will know the difference. b'stards.

    not that brewery's are known for quality practices anyway. like buy back half casks that are known "past it" and push it back out to pubs as quality draft. pumps and pipes at aren't cleaned properly, or when they are, you get your lunchtime tipple half cut with bleach. fantastic.

    60% the time a dodgy tum isn't the result of ropey post-drinking food, but the crap beer people drink. drink bottles or spirits. effers. effing eff faced effers.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Metric

    What's wrong with 500ml - half a litre ? That's just a little bit less than a pint and will be consistent with measures in other European countries.

    Ready for flames from EU haters...

  12. Big_Boomer Silver badge
    Alert

    3 sizes

    So we have the Pint, the ⅔Pint, and the ½Pint.

    Othewise known as the Pint, the Nonce, and the Girl. ;-)

    I'll agree so long as the Nonce is served in pink rimmed glasses.

    On the continent you get 25cl, 33cl and 50cl but over there the beers are generally stronger.

    25cl of Bush Beer (Belgium, 12%abv) contains more Incohol (coz it makes ya Incoherent) than 50cl of Stella or over 1½ Pints of Greene King IPA.

    Me, I prefer the wonderfully smooth Rochefort 8 (Belgium, 8%abv) as it makes me giggly,....which is scary considering I'm a 6'4", 25 Stone bloke.

  13. Ade W
    Thumb Down

    Money, money, money

    Yeah, and the two-thirds by volume will be priced at a fair profit over two thirds whole pint by volume cost and there's money to be made from selling less stuff for more. And there's a load of glasses to be bought and stocked in the pubs and, and, and, please can I mess about with all the things you've not even thought were a problem just for the sake of fiddling about and trying to squeeze a couple of extra pennies out of you to pay the mortgage for the house/feed the drugs'n'hookers habit I can never afford.

    Thanks very much.

  14. Master Baker
    Unhappy

    Lazy feckers

    Lazy fecking feckers.

    3/4 of a pint? I ask you... if you can drink 3/4 of a pint then feck me you can drink a whole pint.

    Half-measures were invented for students and feckless cumshedders anyway. If you're not a student then you should drink beer as god intended - from a pint pot filled to the brim.

    What next?

    "Oh, excuse me barman but I'm a feckless cumshedder and would like 1/8 of a shot of vodka please topped-up with 1/5 coke and 2/6 of ice".

    Pint for the gent and a glass of wine for the lady. Them's the rules. And if we didn't have rules where would we be? France....

    On the other-hand I think the bread idea is brilliant.

  15. Sarah Bee (Written by Reg staff)

    Re: Money, money, money

    Gosh you lot don't half get upset.

    Aha, half! Ha! I didn't even mean to do that and yet I did. Oh the lolz.

    Anyway, you could get a third of a pint at the Banbury beer and cider festival when I went. Marked on the glass and everything. I would totally drink 2/3 - pint too big, half too small. So there.

  16. James

    But I bet ...

    .. the 2/3 pint will sell for the same price as the present pint and the pint will jump up.

    Sounds like an excuse for inflation to me!

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    An opportunity to go metric?

    Half a litre is 88% of pint - maybe near enough to a pint to keep pint-drinkers happy, whilst still reducing their consumption by 12%. (But would probably increase landlords' margins by 12% too)

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Cynicism

    I dont know if its just me but, in the current economic climate how many pubs will want to shell out on brand new glass??

    also i cant help but think this is just to raise more tax as people will still drink untill they are drunk but now have to buy an extra 33% more beers and hence pay more duty :)

    I say we go metric, no man drinks a half, so role on the litre beer glass :)

  19. Ash
    Joke

    Name already created

    A Two-th' (tooth) of beer?

  20. Tim Croydon
    Stop

    Lightweights!

    Is this to appease the lightweight Euro-drinkers who can't cope with a full 568ml and have to have 0.5 litres, most of which is froth?

    A real pint of the good stuff for me please!

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    Help needed testing the proposal?

    I volunteer to try out the new 2/3 pint size. I fell I will need to trying the existing 1/2 and full pint measures at the same time - to gain a full understanding of the implications.

    Where do I apply for a grant?

  22. Richard
    Coat

    Never mind 2/3

    Those old 1/3 pt bottles that were used for the school milk could be put to good use - a mandatory mid-morning beer break.

    Mine's the one with the "Beer Monitor" armband.

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    @Master baker

    Students drink half-pints?! That's news to me! Christ, back "when ah were a lad"(2003-2007) we'd not associate with male half-pint drinkers... or, come to think of it, female half-pint drinkers.

    We should metricise alcohol- Litres of beer and 50ml / 100ml standard spirit measures!

    This is all just a way of americanising us... a Yank "pint" is smaller (and their beer is weaker) than ours- so their alcofrolic intake per pint is probably the same as this new volumetrically restricted pint will be.

  24. Paul McConkey
    IT Angle

    +1 feckless cumshedder!!

    Please can El Reg create a section for the curse or abusive term of the week?

  25. Steve Sherlock
    Flame

    @Master Baker

    Students drinking halves? When hell freezes over maybe. OK, so I might be a 'mature' student, but if you try to palm me off with a half pint you'll soon be calling NHS Direct to find the nearest proctologist...

    Same goes for any barman who wants me to take 2/3 of a pint.

  26. A to Z
    Paris Hilton

    @In That Case

    Pubs can already if they wish have 2 pint glasses.

    The current legal measures allowed for Beers and Ciders in pubs are

    1/3 Pint, 1/2 Pint and any multiples of 1/2 Pint.

    So just ask your friendly landlord to stock 2 pint glasses

    Paris because she always comes in multiples

  27. JeeBee
    Paris Hilton

    Pointless measures for beer

    Surely the 1/3rd pint and 2/3rd pint measures are close enough to half pint to not be worth it!

    Make a 1/4 pint measure (for beer tasting), and a 3/4 pint measure (for strong ciders, lagers and ales). Then you have a set of evenly spaced alcohol volumes!

    20 fluid ounces divides nicely by 4, but not 3. 568ml divides nicely by 4, but not 3.

    Or dump the half pint (maybe leave the pint for metric martyrs), and introduce 150ml, 300ml, 450ml and 600ml measures for the rest of us. Or at least say that is the brim-full volume, so that the pint-or-fractions-thereof is actually not 10% frothy head (for soft northerners who can't handle their drink).

  28. Michael O'Malley

    Variable measure

    I suggest an arbitrary volume of .586854 of a pint.

    Beer can take any shape, and beer can be any volume. So, let's call the new measure "beer can".

  29. James
    Stop

    call it 9/16, 3/8, & 3/16 of a litre & be done with it

    that is all

  30. Matt Thornton

    No diplomacy on this one.

    This is without doubt the most fucking stupid thing I have heard in a long, long time.

    That is all.

  31. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Aussie Sizes

    Well, apart from the fact that we're big down under, the sizes I'm referring to are beers: Middy - 285 ml (0.50 pints); Schooner - 425 ml (0.75 pints); but we do also have full pints in some pubs.

    Someone tried something close to a 2/3 measure (actually it was 0.62 pints) here a few years ago - it was a total flop:

    http://www.smh.com.au/news/heckler/bring-back-the-schooner/2005/07/06/1120329505138.html

  32. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    let me get this straight...

    Am I the only one who thinks that having regulated beer/bread sizes is flat-out insane?

    Why should a pub not be allowed to serve beer in 666 ml glasses if they want (just so long as they don't advertise it as 700ml)?

  33. TimM
    Joke

    Northern measures

    2/3 of a pint is a northern measure anyway if we're talking actual liquid content and not head.

  34. Master Baker
    Heart

    Correction

    Ooops- I meant 2/3 in my earlier post, not 3/4. What can I say? The rage just took over.

    I went to Le Mans earlier this year and was forced to drink beer from tiny plastic cups at 6 Euro's a pop. It was shit. Still, when in Rome (France)....

    I think that forcing pubs to server teenagers 1/3 beer portions in milk bottles is a good idea though. With a neon straw lit-up with the words "can't take my drink" on it or "I'm a little teapot short and stout, I'll have a drink then scream and shout. When I'm sick and covered in muck, I'll phone up mummy and she can pick me up".

    I love beer.

  35. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    re: metric

    nobody really has a problem with beer being served as 500ml instead of a pint, the only thing that causes people to be against it is that the price is very unlikely to change along with the volume

  36. FathomsDown
    Alert

    Sounds like a London pint

    Sounds like you lot haven't bought a pint in London recently. You get beer served in a pint glass but its more like 2/3 of a pint of liquid!

  37. Steve Pettifer
    Coat

    @ Anonymous Coward

    "What's wrong with 500ml - half a litre ?"

    Whats wrong with 568ml - a pint? We use it already we all know what it is and we have the infrastructure for it (barrel sizes, measuring equipment, drinking vessels) so why bother changing? It's been decreed that we don't have to change our traditional measures just to fit in with our continental neighbours (who, I imagine, mostly couldn't give a toss anyway) so we migth as well keep the stuff we all know.

    So a few tourists are confused - once they see a pint and realise its much the same as a half litre at home, and most poeple can easily do that visually, there's no bother. As for distances and weights, so what? They'll be here for a week or two then they'll bugger off home again so it's no great hardship. Indeed, in many cases it's part of the charm of visiting this country because it's different to what they have at home. If you want uniformity everywhere then I feel sorry for you because you're probably the sort of person who thought it would be a wizard idea that every Holiday Inn on the planet should be laid out the same, decorated the same, feel the same, serve the saem food in the same weay int he same dining room as all the others. Let me assure you, it most certainly is not; it's depressing and homgeneous and dull, dull, dull!

    Vive la difference!

    Mines the one with the full pint of best in the pocket.

  38. mutt1170
    Coat

    @you queue for a hour to get severed

    Stu, you HAVE to stop drinking in the East End mate!?!?!

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Mine's the one with the Nip, Flagon and Yard in the pockets

  39. Mark

    re: Sounds like a good idea...

    How much more unwieldy is the litre? A problem to LIFT in one arm whilst drinking. Quaffing will be the result because you'll have frequent aim failures until it gets down to half (the glass is heavier, remember).

    A pint can be drunk easily in 20-30 minutes. If you drink this, you'll increase the traffic to the bar 50%. Needing 50% longer bar and 50% more bar staff. Or lose 50% of your customers.

  40. James Dunmore

    Just like then abroad eh

    Most places in Europe (okay, they serve in half litre, etc.) but you can get the 2/3 measure ish - if your drinking beer with a meal, it's a much better quantity.

    And I agree, that is your drinking a premium larger, you don't necessarily want a whole pint. The trouble is, they will price the 2/3 pint at the same price as a pint.

    But with all the excess "binge drinking" it will surely only be a good thing - for example, at uni, some of the foreign students used to comment that a pint is not the norm where they came from (the 2/3'ds is), so where they would have 3 maybe 4 2/3rds, the limited themselves to 2 pints, where as we carried on to about 6 normal sized pints! What I'm trying to say - if your drinking beer cos you like beer, not to get drunk, then 2/3rds is much better!

  41. TeeCee Gold badge
    Joke

    Good idea.

    They can serve it in a pint glass marked at 2/3. That way it'll solve the age-old problem of spilling your beer while driving.

    (Yes, the title's sarcastic as well.)

  42. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Given 2 things...

    1. Glasses are generally round

    2. Your head spins when you drink too much...

    I think the ideal measure for beers/ciders would be based on the the circle bothering Pi (π)...

    I suggest 1000/π, 2000/π and 3000/π milliliters.

    And since π is an irrational number you could use this to constantly demand tiny top ups from the barman.

    π FTW!

  43. Dunstan Vavasour
    Coat

    In Reg units ...

    ... that would appear to be about 0.73 of a Bulgarian Airbag (Posh), or .81 of a grapefruit, or about a quarter of Bulgarian Airbag (Jordan/Price).

    I suspect only larger premises, more than 7-8 nanoWales, would use this measure.

    Mine's not the one I wore home last night - wonder who ended up with mine.

  44. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    This side of the pond

    A few years ago at a hotel bar in Orlando, Florida, I finished one beer, and asked the barmaid whether the bar had glasses smaller than a pint. She replied that the standard glass was not technically a pint, rather it was 14 ounces. I told her that this was more than technically a non-pint.

  45. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Racing.

    It can be challenging doing more than two or thee laps with pints, this new light weight

    high speed twother will provide for much more intense drinking games covering many

    more laps.

    There'll also be shit loads more glass on the table for the big fight.

  46. Dalek13
    Stop

    Shocking!

    You spend all that time reaching settlement over proper ElReg units and then fall at the first!

    Two Grapefruits o' Best and a Funbag of dry white will continue to be the regular Friday lunchtime order round here thank you!

  47. Seán

    Tsk

    Just drink as much as you like and if they try to stop you, tell them I sent you and drive on by.

  48. Ian
    Go

    Non-issue

    Hi Lester,

    here in Germany, you can get beer in 0.1, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5 and 1litre glasses. In fact, you can even get a regular pint if you happen to be in an Irish Pub. It hasn't hindered me or any of my friends in either getting totally $h1tfaced or even (on rare occasions) moderating our drinking to a lunchtime-friendly tipple. In fact, the only difference is the frequency of trips to the bar.

    Ian

  49. adam
    Unhappy

    what a useful amount of beer.

    Am I right in thinking that 2/3 of a pint of Grolsch or Stella is the minimum amount of beer required to put you over the limit?

  50. Skip Curry
    Happy

    Southern measure?

    I thought that this was the standard southern measure at present. Given that 2/3 pint is alcoholic content and the other 1/3 is lemonade.

  51. Michael

    I sit here reading this

    With a pint mug next to me that's full of tea.

    You people just need to learn to hold your liquids better.

  52. Colin Millar
    Stop

    @let me get this straight...

    No - you're not alone

    People - you are paying money to bureaucrats so that they can tell you how big your glasses should be? Tell them to feck off.

  53. Richard_C
    Coat

    This way madness lies...

    I can picture the scene...

    "two thirds of Old Cobblers please barkeep"

    "certainly sir, 2 thirds"

    "no, two thirds"

    "Thats what i said sir"

    "no you said 2 thirds, i want two thirds"

    "you're barred sunshine!"

    "Fine, i'll get my three quarter length coat and go"

    "GERROUT!"

  54. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    The correct term...

    Is a twother, apparently.

  55. lee harvey osmond

    "infinite unwrapped bread sizes"

    no, no, no, this would never work ... if you tried to bake an infinitely large-sized loaf of bread the dough wouldn't rise .... it would probably undergo gravitational collapse.

  56. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Grr

    A pint is a pint

    Back off Brussels!

    <insert other random Al Murray (mis)quotes as appropriate>

  57. Master Baker
    Thumb Up

    Good pub idea

    The very best of Gods creations (bread and beer) could be combined in a symphony of lucid sin....

    Imagine, a pint glass filled with lovely beer (I'm using the collective expression here - lager, ale, cider etc) then inserted into a lovely warm loaf of bread. Hmmmmmm. Imagine that. I'm imagining that right now and I've gone quite stiff, which isn't too great since I have to do a database restore in a moment.

    The top of the pint will ever-so-slighty protrude over the top of the bread, allowing you to sup your beer and break-off pieces of luuuuuvely warm bread - possibly dipping them in your beer aswell... Potential issues of keeping your beerccool could be solved via a thermal sleeve.

    As a kid I once stuck my winky into a polo mint, which is a bit like the idea here, except it's a pint into a loaf of bread. Funny how old memories catch-up with you at the oddest times.

  58. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Stu Reeves

    "you queue for a hour to get severed"

    Sounds like turning up for work at a bank...

  59. Kevin Dwyer
    Go

    100 Club

    Ah, speaking of beer one of my many regrets is not attempting to join the "100 Club" when I was fit enough to do so.

    A simple challenge, to drink 100 pints of beer and run 100 miles in 100 consecutive hours.

    It sounds deceptively simple but what tactics to use? run first and then go on the lash? alternate drinking and running?

    Perhaps El Reg would sponsor a modern day event, there must be someone on El reg staff who is from "oop north" and thereby tough enough to rise to the challenge?

    Oh, and cos its all 100's it must qualify as being metric right?

  60. The Mighty Biff

    London bleergh

    I'd gladly pay to drink less London beer. I mean, London Pride ? You ought to be ashamed.

  61. Gianni Straniero
    Happy

    Mine's a 0.38056 cubic decimetre, please

    Nothing new under the Sun and Thirteen Cantons. We used to call these "club halves" during my time in the trade. Half a pint served in a pint pot, which was naturally closer to two-thirds by the time you'd finished pouring. Strictly for the cognoscenti.

  62. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    Looks like a normal-size beer in Left Pondia

    According to the Google Calculator, 2/3 British pint = 378 millilitres.

    A standard US beer is 12 fluid ounces (US), or 355 milliliters.

    Nothing to see here; move along now.

    Paris, because she should know whether it's the size that matters.

  63. A J Stiles

    @ AC 13:23

    14 fluid ounces is just slightly over 2/3 of a pint (0.7 as opposed to 0.6...) It's also pretty close to 400 ml.

  64. Luther Blissett

    The measure for measure

    The correct measure for beer is yards, and fractions thereof. Anything else is just big girls blouses. (For which the correct measure is handfuls, and fractions, but preferably multiples thereof).

  65. Jon
    Happy

    Ban top ups

    If we were to adopt a more European style of pouring beer then we could ensure that the top-third of a pint was foam...

  66. Sleeping Dragon
    Paris Hilton

    Man/Woman in the middle

    Pints are for the blokes, halves for the girls. This new measure is something in-between.

    "I'll have a Gender-Bender please barman... you are a bloke, right?"

    PH, she'll serve it up regardless of gender.

  67. Phil A
    Flame

    North of the border

    I could be completely wrong, I often am! Isn't there some odd custom for our kilt wearing brethren where they ask for 2/3 of a pint and a whisky and have some twee and amusing name for it?

  68. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Pints, 2/3 pints and 1/2 pints....

    What ever happened to casks, flaggons and tankards?

  69. Andy Bright
    Stop

    STOP

    I'm particularly lazy and haven't read the other comments, probably not even the entire story, but this is such an inflammatory suggestion I felt compelled to rant immediately.

    My objection to this blasphemous meddling with our beer is simple. HOW LONG BEFORE THEY START CHARGING THESE HORRIBLE 2/3rds AT THE SAME PRICE AS A PROPER PINT? And then push the price of a pint up.

    Ahh I remember the glory days, when shiny new pound coins were nicknamed 'beer tokens', because you could nearly always get a decent pint of a locally brewed brain-melter for about that amount (or sneak into a student bar, local footy club beer hall, etc if you lived in yuppy-ville-charge-me-a-tenner-for-a-pint).

    Besides there's already a 'measure' available for the kind of person you normally ask 'do you want a skirt with that?'. It's called Newcastle Brown Ale and perfectly acceptable with a half-pint class. Only a complete fool would question your manly ability to down ten pints and eject a pavement pizza on your desk when ordering one of these.

    Look we have to stop inflation, it'll be the death of the economy. And inflation starts with raising the price of a pint.

  70. A J Stiles
    Coat

    "twother"

    Isn't there a danger that "twother" could be mistaken for "toother" -- as in "toothing" ?

  71. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    Pint in the pocket

    @Steve Pettifer

    Too true leave it alone, I'm sure it will be cheaper to buy a pint and just not drink it all.

    My coat has been the one that really did have most of a pint in the pocket, complete with glass

  72. Stew Abel
    Stop

    Every one seems to be missing the point...

    Beer (and I'm talking about beer not poncey lager) just somehow tastes best when drunk as a pint; nothing more, nothing less.

  73. Nick
    Thumb Up

    Thanks but..

    ... I'll be sticking with my 'yard' of ale for lunch. Can't be bothered to work out how many London buses that is though.

  74. jake Silver badge

    Yes, I know, I've been trolled ...

    > a Yank "pint" is smaller (and their beer is weaker)

    Actually, we have 22oz bottles of 7%+ brews available in most grocery stores here on the West Coast. Twenty four years ago, my sister's Yorkshire Dales born & bred father-in-law proclaimed Red Tail Ale "The best pint I've ever had" ...

    In no particular order, see:

    http://www.mendobrew.com/home.html

    http://www.lagunitas.com/

    http://www.avbc.com/

    http://www.northcoastbrewing.com/

    http://www.stonebrew.com/

    There are many more. Most people come to the North Bay to go wine tasting. When they visit me, we go beer tasting. (I know, Stone is in Southern CA).

  75. Stewart Haywood

    @North of the border

    There used to be a Scottish Pint that was actually 3 imperial pints. So, in Scotland, I assume the new measure would actually be 2 imperial pints.

    I wonder if they have thought of 2 feet of ale instead of a yard of ale. Here in the US, sandwiches (of the sub variety) are sold by the foot. They always cut the ends of the loaf off, I wonder if the bread is made in bakers feet, a bakers foot being 13 inches.

  76. Tom

    At last

    a decent sized shot glass!

  77. Lindsay Silver badge
    Unhappy

    A tinny!

    2/3 of a Pint = 378mL

    An Australian "tinny" (can) of terrible beer, bought in 30 can bricks = 375mL

    (Also a "stubby" (bottle,) though those have been dropping to 330mL via 355mL and 345mL lately.)

    Sounds like you lot are trying to drop down to our level. Back off!

  78. Andus McCoatover
    Thumb Up

    Hyvä idea!

    I always find a pint of Koskenkorva ("Finnish White Wine" == basicaly, vodka) a little too much for breakfast. Beats the living shi*t out of milk on my cornflakes.

    Glad someone's got some sense.

    (in case you're curious, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koskenkorva_Viina)

  79. Trevor Watt
    Stop

    The cynic in me thinks this is not so much about selling 2/3 of a pint at pint prices......

    The cynic in me thinks this is not so much about selling 2/3 of a pint at pint prices, but to 'up-size' the ladies' half in the same way they have up-sized wine glasses from 125ml. Now many pubs use 175ml or even 250ml wine glasses, so a large glass of wine is as much as a quarter of a litre. Now women who have been drinking the larger measures have become accustomed to a larger glass size and feel 'cheated' if presented with a normal sized glass of wine and the net result is heavier drinking by women. So the net result of the increased wine glass sizing is the pubs are selling more wine as people simply drink more over the same period of time.

    The larger wine glass has made women drinking larger measures more acceptable, but pubs still feel there is much resistance by many women to being seen to be drinking pints. So how can they get women to drink a larger measure of beer? Simply present it as 'not a mans measure' so therefore it must be a womans' measure. Most of the mens' comments above prove this, they won't be seen dead drinking less than a pint.

    So how do you encourage women to drink more beer? This would initially be done in pretty 'table glasses' to stimulate demand, probably supplied free by the brewers. Once the demand is there the glasses will no longer be free and a middle sized pint-style glass introduced at the pub's expense. The pub wins, the brewers win, and the treasury takes the biggest slice and wins too. The damage done at health, street and family level by women drinking more is not something any of them will be bothered much byed wine glasses from 125ml. Now many pubs use 175ml or even 250ml wine glasses, so a large glass of wine is as much as a quarter of a litre. Now women who have been drinking the larger measures have become accustomed to a larger glass size and feel 'cheated' if presented with a normal sized glass of wine and the net result is heavier drinking by women. So the net result of the increased wine glass sizing is the pubs are selling more wine as people simply drink more over the same period of time.

    The larger wine glass has made women drinking larger measures more acceptable, but pubs still feel there is much resistance by many women to being seen to be drinking pints. So how can they get women to drink a larger measure of beer? Simply present it as 'not a mans measure' so therefore it must be a womans' measure. Most of the mens' comments above prove this, they won't be seen dead drinking less than a pint.

    So how do you encourage women to drink more beer? This would initially be done in pretty 'table glasses' to stimulate demand, probably supplied free by the brewers. Once the demand is there the glasses will no longer be free and a middle sized pint-style glass introduced at the pub's expense. The pub wins, the brewers win, and the treasury takes the biggest slice and wins too. The damage done at health, street and family level by women drinking more is not something any of them will be bothered much by

  80. Wayland Sothcott
    Coat

    Will beer have to get even stronger?

    Beer used to be 3.8% to 4.2% now it's 5% so a pint is more than it used to be. So if a 2/3 pint brings 5% beer down to about 3.3% per glass then will they have to make beer 7.5% to have the same kick as a 5% pint?

    Where's my coat, going down the pub for a bit of fresh air.

  81. zaax
    Unhappy

    more chances for the brewers to rip us off.

    At my club it's £2 a pint. In the pub down the road it's £2.80. The brewers are just ripping us off.

  82. Winkypop Silver badge
    Thumb Up

    Light weights

    Anything less then a SLAB and you're a big nancy!

    (24 cans)

  83. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Northern Measures

    2/3 pint is NOT a Northern measure, we have Pint glasses that are larger to take a full pint and the head.

  84. ian
    Thumb Down

    Industry-recognized standards

    Clearly the ISO need to step in. The idea that the volume of my slosh should be based on the bladder capacity of an ancient king (and I can't be arsed to remember which) is utterly repugnant to me.

    "Beerman! Two pints for me an' my mate!" Would sound so much better if it were "Beerman! Two 9802.45s for me an' my mate!".

    While the brewers MIGHT flog their fluids at more for less, the modern world requires them to sell it in larger volumes than can normally be consumed but quote the price in fractions of the amount served (i.e. price per pint, but only available in hogsheads). After several hours in the boozer, I can hardly sum two single digit numbers, much less perform any higher arithmetic functions.

  85. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Another less than cunning Bliarite ruse

    To get us into the swing of the "continental style cafe culture" they're always blithering on about, where you sip overpriced 'premium' beer (good for the economy) while discussing the merits of switching electricity providers, nibbling on a (pricey) vietnamese mung bean and rocket salad drizzled with basalmic vinegar.

    As opposed to the british version, where you drink a lot of beer in big glasses, gettin progressively more bladdered while discussing the merits of the barmaids choice of thong and deciding whether its a doner or a burger that'll be making your fingers stink for the next 3 days.

    The business 'stakeholders' are only looking for an excuse to sell less beer for the same money; beers best in it's natural measure, so fuck 'em.

  86. Andy Davies

    @A to Z

    right, it was all down to poor draftsmanship (oops!) - or to introduce an IT angle an inclusive v. exclusive OR - the wording was "1/3rd pint or 1/2 pint or multiples thereof".

    The weights and measures people being by nature restricters of choice, decided that multiples referred only to 1/2's. This proposal just overules that nonsense.

    AndyD 8-)#

  87. Richard Jukes

    Why?

    Just why are we actually paying our tax money to support another quango that is simply creating more red tape? Beer should be sold as beer, the barman fills the glass, you drink. If you didnt like how much beer was in said glass, dont go back there. Simple.

    This would allow more competition between pubs, imagine they could sell a gallon of beer for say £5 and ensure a shorter bar que. This is quite an absurd idea because 1) drinks get knocked over 2) it would go flat - however, this is the point - Is it not my right, indeed <b>right</b> - to be able to order beer in what ever damn measurements I like? Beer should be priced per 100ml and we should all be allowed to bring our own chalices to the party.

  88. Chris Pinto

    @ Cynicism by AC

    To be fair, pubs get 90% of their glasses for free by promotion, though granted the pub will eventually pick up the "bill" via increased costs of ales, beers, spirits, hell even post-mix

  89. The Mighty Spang
    Thumb Up

    ok if we want to go continental

    maybe, yeah. outlaw real ale, have oversized glasses. Spit the stuff out at a rapid rate so it has a nice head (and is not as they say, "a dead beer") and i'd go for it.

    but if we stick with flat beer that takes an age to pour, forget it, i leave enough places because i don't get served quick enough anyway.

    hear that drinks industry? i just don't fsking care about your "decor" or "ambience", if it takes me more than 5 mins to get a drink im out the door and up the offy. I don't pay over the odds* for beer so i can spend a lot of time waiting in a queue not drinking any of it

    *i don't get how weatherspoons are like £2.10 for a beer and everywhere else is £2.80 round here. what's the secret?

  90. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Simple Maths to the Rescue

    Buy three pints, drink two and ask for a carry out, problem solved.

    If all things in life were this easy.

  91. Steve Evans

    Honestly...

    Do these tw*ts really have nothing better to do?!

    How did the meeting going "Right guys, we haven't had our name in print for several months, we need to come up with something to prove that we still exists, get us some column multiple of 25.4mm and generally keep us in a job for the next 12 months".

    How about just sort out the pricing so that a half is *HALF* the price of a pint. Then take this to Europe too... The other week I was paying 85p for a large and 76p for a small in Poland. Outrageous!

  92. James Henstridge

    beer sizes

    presumably the reason for standardised measures for beer is so that people can compare prices easier. Can you easily tell whether 0.5L at $7 is better or worse than 1 pint at $8? How about after a few pints?

    The other way to fix this problem rather than requiring that beer be served in particular measures is to require that prices get published in a standardised manner (e.g. $ per 100mL) so that you can tell whether it is good value no matter what the size.

  93. Trix
    Boffin

    Works fine in Oz

    I like the measure, actually, commonly called a "schooner" here (depending on which part of Oz you're in). A pint can be a bit much to drink if you have a limited amount of time, or you're drinking a premium beer (>5% alcohol), but a half/"middy" barely wets the sides. I still drink pints when it's the weaker stuff, or I'm not in a rush, or it's not too stinking hot (a pint goes lukewarm in the 40 deg heat after about 5 minutes) - schooners are good the rest of the time.

    But Australian pubs don't always (generally?) serve pints - you get schooners, pots/middys and in the old days, there was a "pony" (small size for the ladeez, <170ml). The standard sizes are middy/pot = 225ml (half pint), schooner = 425ml and pint = 570ml. Unless you're in South Australia. And a middy's a middy in NSW and Canberra, while it's a "pot" in Victoria and Queensland.

    In South Australia, they're wimps, and call the middy the schooner, while the schooner (425ml) is called a "pint". A real (metric, 570ml) pint is called an "Imperial pint" in Adelaide.

    No-one's suggesting getting rid of pints in the UK altogether, so get a grip, and if you find another measure "confusing", try living in Australia, mite.

  94. Anonymous Coward
    Joke

    Three sizes

    We can call them "Small", "Regular" and "Large" and all the bar-people can have badges that show their level of experience with a handy system of symbols, such as, say, a row of five stars.

    That'd add a real touch of class to the whole beer drinking experience.

  95. David Adams
    Boffin

    1/3rd of a pint

    1/3rd of a pint has always been a legal measure.

    It's called a Gill (Pronounced Jill), and before we went metric, spirits were licenced to be sold in measures of 1/6th of a Gill or any multiple thereof.

    Lots of pubs sell specialist beer (read extra strong) in 1/3rd pint measures.

    If we already have 1/3rd why not 2/3rds.

  96. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Two Thirds of a pint!

    My watering "hole" already serves it! I have to ask it to be topped up to a pint!!

  97. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I think i can see where this one is going

    So a pint is, say, £3.00. The new 2/3 lightweight Aussie glass will be £2.80. If you ask the pub why it costs so much they will say they are responding to customer demand. If you argue that that is bollocks, you will be thrown out.

    Welcome to Britain.

  98. Wize

    All that fuss over 1/6 of a pint?

    They already have 1/2 pints. Why sell 2/3 pints as the difference is about one gulp?

  99. Steve Hosgood
    Boffin

    Who's Gill anyway?

    Sorry David Adams: the imperial Gill (used for UK spirits sales back in the 20th century) was/is a quarter pint, not a third.

    Colloquially, the word 'gill' has also been used to refer to third pint and half pint measures, but that wasn't the legal definition used for licencing laws. Spirits have been sold in 25ml or 35ml multiples for years now, so the 'gill' is obsolete as far as licencing is concerned these days in the UK.

    As far as I'm concerned, a proposal like this should be used as the catalyst for a long-overdue switch to metric measures anyway. Everyone else in Europe sells beer in 250ml, 330ml and 500ml sizes, and that seems perfectly sensible here. We should insist on two provisos for such a change IMHO:

    1) The word 'pint' is redefined to mean 500ml. I'm sure no-one wants the awkward phrase of "three 500mls of bitter and a packet of crisps, please". I believe the word 'pint' still persists in Germany and Austria to mean 500ml anyway. And they've been metric for years.

    2) Trading standards people to enforce a drop in prices of 12% during and after "pint resizing day" to reflect the change in volume of the product.

  100. Matthew Wilkes
    Coat

    What's the matter, lagerboy, afraid you might taste something?

    1/3 pints are generally used in ale tasting sessions, some of us want to get through everything on offer and be blotto at the end, not before having a game of billiards.

  101. David Silver badge

    The glasses should match the bottles

    I agree with Steve Hosgood: 50 cl and 33 cl sound about right to me - and they're both not coincidentally the same size as beer bottles. Both half a pint (284 ml) or 250 ml are just too small to bother with for everyday drinking (yes, even for most girls I know), although I can see the use for 'taster' measures. As for the extra 68 ml (mouthful) in a pint? Well, that's the warm beer at the bottom of the glass that I'd rather not have to be paying for anyway!

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