Conversion tool

Convert grams per cubic centimeter to pounds per gallon instantly

Enter a value, see the result, copy it, and save a PDF snapshot.

Input

Type a value, then press Enter to calculate.

Result

0.000 lb/gal

Digits 3

Rounded for readability. Use the arrows to increase or decrease the number of shown digits.

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Notes

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How it works

We use lb/gal = g/cm^3 x 8.34540445208.

Exact relationship: 1 g/cm^3 = 8.34540445208 lb/gal.

Example: 1 g/cm^3 = 8.345 lb/gal.

Notes: Results are rounded in the default view.

Examples

FAQ

What physical quantity do grams per cubic centimeter and pounds per gallon express?

Grams per cubic centimeter express density, meaning mass per unit volume rather than mass alone or total volume alone. Pounds per gallon express density in a way that aligns directly with liquid-handling and mixing work where gallons are already familiar.

What is the difference between grams per cubic centimeter and pounds per gallon?

Grams per cubic centimeter and pounds per gallon both express density, but they are favored in different material, fluid, laboratory, and industrial contexts.

What is the history of the gram per cubic centimeter?

Grams per cubic centimeter grew from metric laboratory practice and remain common in material-property references.

What is the history of the pound per gallon?

Pounds per gallon became common in liquid-handling, coatings, chemicals, and utility work using U.S. customary capacity units.

Were the gram per cubic centimeter and pound per gallon discovered by a specific person?

Grams per cubic centimeter are a derived measurement convention rather than a discovery by one person. Pounds per gallon are a practical engineering convention rather than a one-person discovery.

Where are grams per cubic centimeter and pounds per gallon used in science and engineering?

Grams per cubic centimeter are used in materials data, chemistry, plastics, ceramics, and lab-based property work. Pounds per gallon are used in coatings, chemicals, process liquids, utility discussions, and fluid-mixing documentation.

Why do density units matter in calculations?

Density units affect mass estimates, buoyancy, material selection, fluid properties, batch calculations, and shipping assumptions. Keeping the unit attached helps prevent confusion between density, mass, and volume.

Can I trust this for critical density calculations?

Use this for convenience and verify against your governing standard, material cert, SDS, or controlled engineering source for critical work. Real density values can vary with temperature, composition, and processing state.

References