whoa, i did not expect such a response
i should have said "metric" rather than SI. true SI discourages the use of mm or cm in lieu of meters, yet acknowledges that "nm" are okay. it is no better than any of the other systems in that regard.
in the real world, you have pressure units of kilponds/cm2, kg/cm2, kg/mm2, Pa, Bar, Atm, mmHg, mmWC(water column),for example. these are used because they are meaningful to the application at hand
when it comes to piping design, you discover that mm are commonly used for pipe diameter, not cm or m. these are not just ordinary mm dimensions, they are "nominal", because the pipe is, in many cases, manufactured in inches,
unless you are using DIN or JIS piping standards, in which case you have a whole new set of problems.
The units for vibrating systems is no less confusing with the elastic and shear moduli expressed as kilponds/cm2, kg/cm2, kg/mm2, Pa, but with much of the testing data in various metric and SI units, and even customary english units.
SI is great in a perfect world