Force Unit Converter
Convert between force units including newtons, dynes, pound-force, kilogram-force, kip, and more.
Understanding Force
What is a Newton?
The newton (N) is the SI unit of force. One newton is defined as the force required to accelerate a mass of one kilogram at a rate of one meter per second squared.
Named after Sir Isaac Newton, who formulated the laws of motion.
Newton's Second Law
Force, mass, and acceleration are related by Newton's famous equation:
Where F is force (newtons), m is mass (kilograms), and a is acceleration (m/s²).
Weight vs Mass
Weight is a force caused by gravity acting on mass. At Earth's surface (standard gravity g = 9.80665 m/s²):
A 1 kg mass weighs approximately 9.807 N on Earth, but would weigh only 1.62 N on the Moon!
Kilogram-force vs Kilogram: A Critical Distinction
Similar to the Calorie/calorie confusion, kilogram and kilogram-force are completely different units:
Kilogram (kg)
Type: Unit of mass (SI base unit)
Measures: Amount of matter in an object
Constant: Same everywhere in the universe
Kilogram-force (kgf)
Type: Unit of force (deprecated)
Measures: Weight of 1 kg at standard gravity
Value: 1 kgf = 9.80665 N (exactly)
Dyne (CGS System)
The dyne is the CGS (centimeter-gram-second) unit of force. One dyne is the force required to accelerate a mass of one gram at a rate of one centimeter per second squared.
The dyne is tiny: 1 newton equals 100,000 dynes.
Pound-force (lbf)
The pound-force is an imperial/US unit defined as the force exerted by gravity on a one-pound mass at standard Earth gravity.
Not to be confused with the pound (lb), which is a unit of mass. A 1 lb mass weighs 1 lbf on Earth.
Kip
The kip (kilopound-force) is commonly used in structural engineering in the United States.
Building columns and beams are often rated in kips.
Poundal
The poundal is an absolute unit in the foot-pound-second (FPS) system. Unlike pound-force, the poundal is defined without reference to gravity.
One poundal accelerates a one-pound mass at 1 ft/s². The poundal is rarely used today.
Sthene
The sthene (sn) is the MTS (meter-tonne-second) system unit of force.
The sthene is essentially a kilonewton and is rarely used.
Standard Gravity
Standard gravity (g₀ or gₙ) is defined as exactly 9.80665 m/s² for conversion purposes. This is approximately the gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface (45° latitude, sea level). Actual gravity varies by location:
- Equator: 9.78 m/s² (centrifugal effect from Earth's rotation)
- Poles: 9.83 m/s² (no centrifugal effect, closer to Earth's center)
- Moon: 1.62 m/s² (about 1/6 of Earth's)
- Mars: 3.71 m/s² (about 38% of Earth's)
Force in Different Contexts
Structural Engineering
- Building loads: Measured in kN or kip (structural weight, live loads, wind, seismic)
- Concrete strength: Often in MPa (force per area), but loads in kN
- Steel tension: Cables rated in kN or ton-force
Aerospace
- Thrust: Jet engines and rockets measured in kN or MN
- Lift and drag: Aerodynamic forces in newtons
- g-forces: Acceleration expressed as multiples of g (9.81 m/s²)
Automotive
- Engine torque: N·m (newton-meters, not a force but torque)
- Brake force: Measured in newtons or kN
- Crash testing: Impact forces in kN
Physics & Biology
- Molecular forces: Piconewtons (pN) for DNA, proteins
- Atomic forces: Nanonewtons (nN) in AFM microscopy
- Friction: Measured in newtons, depends on normal force and coefficient
Ton-force Variants
| Type | Mass Basis | Force at Standard Gravity |
|---|---|---|
| Metric ton-force | 1,000 kg (tonne) | 9,806.65 N = 9.80665 kN |
| Short ton-force (US) | 2,000 lb | 8,896.44 N = 8.89644 kN |
| Long ton-force (UK) | 2,240 lb | 9,964.02 N = 9.96402 kN |
Most Common Conversions
| Conversion | Example Result |
|---|---|
| Dynes to Kilonewtons (dyn to kN) | 1,000,000 dyn = 0.001 kN |
| Kilonewtons to Dynes (kN to dyn) | 1 kN = 100,000,000 dyn |
| Kips to Newtons (kip to N) | 1 kip = 4,448.222 N |
| Newtons to Kips (N to kip) | 1,000 N = 0.2248 kip |
| Ponds to Newtons (p to N) | 1 p = 0.00980665 N |
| Newtons to Ponds (N to p) | 1 N = 101.972 p |
Quick Reference Cards
SI Base Unit
Imperial Units
Gravitational Units
CGS System
Real-World Force Examples
Weight of Apple
Human Hand Grip
Car Weight
Jet Engine Thrust
Rocket Thrust
DNA Molecular Force
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