Foot-pound to Tons of TNT
ft-lb
tTNT
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 ft-lb (Foot-pound) → 3.2404826681e-10 tTNT (Tons of TNT) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Foot-pound to Tons of TNT)
| Foot-pound (ft-lb) | Tons of TNT (tTNT) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.00000000032404826681 |
| 12 | 0.00000000388857920172 |
| 50 | 0.00000001620241334048 |
| 100 | 0.00000003240482668096 |
| 200 | 0.00000006480965336192 |
| 400 | 0.00000012961930672384 |
| 600 | 0.00000019442896008576 |
About Foot-pound (ft-lb)
The foot-pound (ft·lb) is the standard unit of torque and mechanical energy in the US customary system, equal to approximately 1.35582 joules. It represents the work done by a force of one pound-force through a displacement of one foot. Engine torque in American automotive engineering is quoted exclusively in foot-pounds (e.g., a V8 pickup truck producing 400 ft·lb). Bolt torque specifications in the US use foot-pounds for larger fasteners. One foot-pound equals 12 inch-pounds.
A typical car engine produces 150–400 ft·lb of torque. A cylinder head bolt on an engine is typically torqued to 60–90 ft·lb.
About Tons of TNT (tTNT)
A ton of TNT equals 4,184,000,000 joules (4.184 GJ) and is the standard unit for large conventional bombs, non-nuclear explosives, and the lower end of nuclear weapon yields. The Massive Ordnance Air Blast (MOAB), the largest non-nuclear bomb in the US arsenal, has a yield of about 11 tons of TNT. The Hiroshima atomic bomb released the equivalent of approximately 15,000 tons (15 kilotons) of TNT.
The largest conventional bomb (MOAB) yields about 11 tons of TNT. A V2 rocket warhead carried about 1 ton of TNT.
Foot-pound – Frequently Asked Questions
Why is engine torque measured in foot-pounds in the US?
American automotive engineering adopted foot-pounds because it was the natural imperial torque unit — one pound-force at one foot from the crankshaft center. The convention became entrenched through SAE standards, shop manuals, and dyno testing. Converting to newton-meters (1 ft·lb ≈ 1.3558 N·m) is straightforward, but the entire US aftermarket ecosystem — torque wrenches, spec sheets, and mechanics' training — runs on foot-pounds.
Why do diesel engines produce more torque but less horsepower than petrol engines at the same displacement?
Diesel engines compress air to much higher ratios (15–22:1 vs 8–12:1 for petrol), creating higher cylinder pressures that push harder on the piston — more force per stroke means more torque. But diesels rev lower (typically 4,000–4,500 RPM max vs 6,000–8,000 RPM) because the heavier rotating assembly and slower combustion limit speed. Since horsepower = torque × RPM / 5,252, the lower RPM ceiling caps peak horsepower despite the torque advantage.
What is the torque-to-horsepower relationship and why does it cross at 5,252 RPM?
Horsepower = torque (ft·lb) × RPM / 5,252. The constant 5,252 comes from unit conversion: 1 HP = 33,000 ft·lb/min, and 33,000 / (2π) ≈ 5,252. This means torque and horsepower curves on a dyno chart always intersect at exactly 5,252 RPM. Below that speed, torque is numerically higher; above it, horsepower is. This is why trucks optimize for low-RPM torque (pulling force) while sportscars chase high-RPM horsepower (speed).
What foot-pound torque values are typical for car lug nuts?
Most passenger cars specify 80–100 ft·lb for wheel lug nuts; light trucks and SUVs call for 100–140 ft·lb; and heavy-duty trucks may require 450–500 ft·lb. Under-torquing risks the wheel coming loose, while over-torquing can warp brake rotors or snap studs. A calibrated torque wrench — not an impact gun alone — is the safe approach.
How does foot-pound muzzle energy relate to firearm stopping power?
Muzzle energy in foot-pounds measures the kinetic energy of a bullet leaving the barrel. A 9 mm pistol produces about 350–400 ft·lb, a .45 ACP about 350–500 ft·lb, and a .308 rifle about 2,600–2,800 ft·lb. While muzzle energy is one factor in terminal performance, bullet construction, sectional density, and shot placement matter at least as much in real-world ballistics.
Tons of TNT – Frequently Asked Questions
How powerful is one ton of TNT in real terms?
One ton of TNT releases 4.184 GJ — roughly the energy of 120 liters of petrol or the electricity an average US home uses in 1.2 days. In blast terms, one ton of TNT in open air produces lethal overpressure within about 15–20 meters and can shatter windows at 100+ meters. The MOAB bomb (11 tons TNT) flattened structures across a 150-meter radius.
What is the difference between a ton of TNT, a kiloton, and a megaton?
They differ by factors of 1,000: 1 kiloton = 1,000 tons, 1 megaton = 1,000,000 tons. Conventional bombs are rated in tons (the MOAB is 11 tons). Tactical nuclear weapons are rated in kilotons (Hiroshima was ~15 kt). Strategic thermonuclear warheads are rated in megatons (modern US warheads are 0.3–0.475 Mt). The scale spans nine orders of magnitude.
How many tons of TNT was the Beirut port explosion in 2020?
The 2020 Beirut explosion was caused by 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate and was estimated at roughly 500–1,100 tons of TNT equivalent. For comparison, the Oklahoma City bombing (1995) was about 2 tons TNT equivalent, and the Halifax explosion (1917) was roughly 2,900 tons. Beirut ranked among the largest non-nuclear explosions in history.
How is tons of TNT used for meteor and asteroid impact energy?
Small meteor airbursts are rated in tons or kilotons of TNT. The 2013 Chelyabinsk meteor released about 440,000 tons (440 kt) — roughly 30 times the Hiroshima bomb. The Tunguska event (1908) is estimated at 3–15 megatons. The Chicxulub asteroid that ended the dinosaurs released roughly 100 trillion tons (100 million megatons) of TNT equivalent energy.
What is the largest conventional (non-nuclear) explosion in tons of TNT?
The largest planned non-nuclear explosion was the British demolition of Heligoland fortifications in 1947, using 6,700 tons of TNT equivalent. The largest accidental explosion was the Halifax harbour disaster (1917) at roughly 2,900 tons. The largest conventional bomb, the US GBU-43/B MOAB, yields about 11 tons — tiny compared to accidental industrial blasts.