The benefit of Fahrenheit's scale is that of being the typical range for human habitation.
That being, nominally, for most of Europe and the Americas, 0° to 100° Fahrenheit. Which is roughly -17° C to 38°C
Adding another 15°F to each end, so -15° to 115° F, and you get most of the inhabited deserts and tundras. That is to -27 to 47°C
Centigrade is no benefit over Kelvin, and Kelvin is what's used in physics. One could do the same transform to Fahrenheit that Kelvin did to Celsius... and have a 460-560 range for human comfortable hab, and 445 to 575 for overall range.
Likewise, the base 10 sucks as a mathematical function; we'd be far better off for mental math with base 12.