What is the acceleration converter?
The acceleration converter is a collection of calculators for changing one acceleration unit into another. Convert acceleration units for physics, vehicles, motion analysis, vibration, and engineering calculations.
Acceleration conversions are used in physics, vehicle performance, motion analysis, vibration, seismic measurements, and engineering.
Available acceleration units
This category includes the following units:
- Meter per Second Squared (m/s2)
- Foot per Second Squared (ft/s2)
- Standard Gravity (g)
- Gal (Gal)
Common acceleration use cases
Use this category when the same measurement appears in different unit systems, data sheets, calculators, reports, or regional conventions.
- Acceleration conversions help compare measurements across specifications, calculators, labels, and technical references.
- Use this category when source data and target documents use different acceleration units.
- The dedicated conversion pages show formulas, examples, tables, related pages, and FAQ for individual unit pairs.
Popular acceleration units explained
These short unit notes help readers choose the right starting unit before opening a specific conversion page.
Meter per Second Squared (m/s2)
Meter per Second Squared (m/s2) is a acceleration unit.
Browse meters-per-second-squared conversionsFoot per Second Squared (ft/s2)
Foot per Second Squared (ft/s2) is a acceleration unit.
Browse feet-per-second-squared conversionsStandard Gravity (g)
Standard Gravity (g) is a acceleration unit.
Browse g-force conversionsGal (Gal)
Gal (Gal) is a acceleration unit.
Browse gal conversionsCommon acceleration conversion mistakes
Most wrong answers come from mixing unit systems, rounding too early, or choosing a unit that looks similar but means something different.
- Do not hide the original acceleration unit when copying a result into a report, label, or calculator.
- Do not round intermediate values when the result will be reused in another formula.
- Check whether the source and target units describe the same physical quantity before comparing acceleration values.
Popular acceleration conversion pages
Start with one of these common acceleration conversions:
- meters-per-second-squared to feet-per-second-squared
- feet-per-second-squared to meters-per-second-squared
- g-force to meters-per-second-squared
- meters-per-second-squared to g-force
- gal to meters-per-second-squared
- meters-per-second-squared to gal
Browse acceleration conversions by starting unit
Use these grouped links when you know the unit you are starting from and want to compare several destination units.
Meter per Second Squared conversions
Start with meters per second squared and convert to common acceleration units.
Foot per Second Squared conversions
Start with feet per second squared and convert to common acceleration units.
Standard Gravity conversions
Start with standard gravity and convert to common acceleration units.
Gal conversions
Start with gal and convert to common acceleration units.
All acceleration conversion pages
This complete index helps users and search engines discover every generated acceleration conversion page.
Related categories and references
Use these links to move between neighboring converter categories, hand-written unit references, popular units, and complete site indexes.
Unit Wiki and references
Popular acceleration units
Complete indexes and tools
How acceleration conversion works
Acceleration conversions use a standard reference unit as the bridge between source and target units, so each page can show both the direct formula and practical examples.
How to use this converter
Enter a value, choose the units, and read the converted result immediately. Each dedicated conversion page also includes a formula, examples, a conversion table, related links, and FAQ.
FAQ
Which acceleration units are included?
This category includes meters per second squared, feet per second squared, standard gravity, gal and related units.
Are formulas included?
Yes. Individual conversion pages include formulas, manual steps, examples, and conversion tables.