ajlelectronics
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Glad to see there's still pedants
ITYM "Glad to see there are still pedants" ? :-)
ITYM "Glad to see there are still pedants" ? :-)
The plural is still Ampere. Way I've always understood the use is along the lines of:
The Amperage is five Ampere, (or Amp).
I never add a s to the end, personally. That's the way I've always used it, anyhows.![]()
Glad to see there's still pedants
ITYM "Glad to see there are still pedants" ? :-)
A message written in the Queen's English is difficult to misunderstand.

We're all walking on eggshells now, triple checking our posts before posting just in case something wrong could ov crept in!
You have a "5 amp fuse", but "the current in the wire is 5 amps."
It's like saying "there's a garage 10 mile down the road" when you mean "10 miles."
A mile away or 10 mile away, there's never need to add a s to the words. Any unit of measurment or similar means one unit of that measurement, so you are merely indicating the number of singular units as a whole. The number denotes more than one. The term itself is still a singular reference though. 
