Conversion tool

Convert pounds per cubic inch to kilograms per cubic meter 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 kg/m^3

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 kg/m^3 = lb/in^3 x 27679.9047102.

Exact relationship: 1 lb/in^3 = 27679.9047102 kg/m^3.

Example: 0.05 lb/in^3 = 1383.995 kg/m^3.

Notes: Results are rounded in the default view.

Examples

FAQ

What physical quantity do pounds per cubic inch and kilograms per cubic meter express?

Pounds per cubic inch express high-density values in compact customary units and are useful where inch-based geometry is already in use. Kilograms per cubic meter express density in SI base-compatible form and are common in engineering, fluids, and physics.

What is the difference between pounds per cubic inch and kilograms per cubic meter?

Pounds per cubic inch and kilograms per cubic meter both express density, but they are favored in different material, fluid, laboratory, and industrial contexts.

What is the history of the pound per cubic inch?

Pounds per cubic inch developed from customary mass and geometry practice in U.S.-oriented engineering work.

What is the history of the kilogram per cubic meter?

Kilograms per cubic meter follow directly from SI mass and volume conventions and became standard in international engineering.

Were the pound per cubic inch and kilogram per cubic meter discovered by a specific person?

Pounds per cubic inch are a derived engineering unit rather than something discovered by one person. Kilograms per cubic meter are a standardized derived SI unit rather than a one-person discovery.

Where are pounds per cubic inch and kilograms per cubic meter used in science and engineering?

Pounds per cubic inch are used in material tables, mechanical design, stock calculations, and U.S.-customary engineering references. Kilograms per cubic meter are used in fluids, structural materials, thermal calculations, process engineering, and standards-based 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