Use this pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second converter to change a pound per foot hour measurement into its pound per foot second equivalent. Enter a number in the calculator above and the result updates instantly.
Dynamic viscosity conversions are useful for fluids, oils, coatings, polymers, pumps, process engineering, and material specifications.
What is a pound per foot hour?
Pound per Foot Hour (lb/ft h) is a dynamic viscosity unit.
What is a pound per foot second?
Pound per Foot Second (lb/ft s) is a dynamic viscosity unit.
Pounds Per Foot Hour to Pounds Per Foot Second Converter formula
To convert pounds per foot hour to pounds per foot second, use the formula below.
1 lb/ft s = 3,600 lb/ft h. This relationship is the conversion factor used by the calculator.
How to convert pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second
Start with the pound per foot hour value, apply the formula, and round the result only after the calculation is complete.
Example: 10 lb/ft h = 0.0027777778 lb/ft s.
- 1 lb/ft h = 0.0002777778 lb/ft s
- 10 lb/ft h = 0.0027777778 lb/ft s
- 100 lb/ft h = 0.0277777778 lb/ft s
Manual conversion steps
- Write down the value in pounds per foot hour.
- Use the conversion formula: pounds per foot second = pounds per foot hour / 3,600.
- Calculate the result in pounds per foot second.
- Round the answer to the number of decimal places you need.
For quick checking, the converter above performs the same calculation automatically.
Common pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second use cases
This conversion is useful in practical situations where measurements need to move between different unit systems or audiences.
- Convert pounds per foot hour to pounds per foot second when comparing fluid viscosity data from oils, coatings, polymers, or process specifications.
- Viscosity conversions are useful when lab reports, pump data, and material sheets use different engineering unit systems.
Common mistakes when converting pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second
These are the most common issues to watch for when doing this conversion by hand.
- Do not mix up the direction of the conversion. pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second is not the same as pounds-per-foot-second to pounds-per-foot-hour.
- Avoid rounding too early. Keep the full result during the calculation, then round the final answer.
Pounds Per Foot Hour to Pounds Per Foot Second conversion table
| Pound per Foot Hour | Pound per Foot Second |
|---|---|
| 1 lb/ft h | 0.0002777778 lb/ft s |
| 5 lb/ft h | 0.0013888889 lb/ft s |
| 10 lb/ft h | 0.0027777778 lb/ft s |
| 25 lb/ft h | 0.0069444444 lb/ft s |
| 50 lb/ft h | 0.0138888889 lb/ft s |
| 100 lb/ft h | 0.0277777778 lb/ft s |
How to convert pounds-per-foot-second to pounds-per-foot-hour
To reverse the conversion, switch the two units in the calculator or open the reverse conversion page: pounds-per-foot-second to pounds-per-foot-hour.
Reversing the units is useful when you already have a value in pounds per foot second and need the equivalent value in pounds per foot hour.
How to use this pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second converter
- Enter the number you want to convert in the value field.
- Confirm that the from unit is Pound per Foot Hour and the to unit is Pound per Foot Second.
- Read the converted result in the result box.
- Use the copy button if you want to paste the answer elsewhere.
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FAQ
What is the formula for pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second?
The formula is: pounds per foot second = pounds per foot hour / 3,600.
How do I convert pounds-per-foot-hour to pounds-per-foot-second by hand?
Write down the value in pounds per foot hour, apply the formula, and round the final result in pounds per foot second.
How accurate is this converter?
The converter uses standard conversion factors and shows rounded results for readability.
Can I reverse the conversion?
Yes. Use the swap button in the converter or open the related reverse conversion page.
Why do results sometimes have many decimal places?
Some unit conversions do not produce short decimal values. Keep more decimal places for technical work, and round the answer for everyday use.