Inch-Ounce to Barrels of Oil Equivalent
in-oz
BOE
Conversion History
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|---|---|---|
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Quick Reference Table (Inch-Ounce to Barrels of Oil Equivalent)
| Inch-Ounce (in-oz) | Barrels of Oil Equivalent (BOE) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.00000000000115422553 |
| 10 | 0.00000000001154225534 |
| 20 | 0.00000000002308451067 |
| 40 | 0.00000000004616902134 |
| 80 | 0.00000000009233804268 |
| 100 | 0.00000000011542255335 |
| 160 | 0.00000000018467608537 |
About Inch-Ounce (in-oz)
The inch-ounce (in·oz) is a unit of very small torque equal to approximately 0.007062 joules — 1/16 of an inch-pound. It is used for servo motor torque ratings in model aircraft and small robotics, miniature instrument spring tensions, and the adjustment of precision optical and scientific instruments. Where inch-pounds are too coarse for the application, inch-ounces provide a finer unit without switching to SI.
A small servo motor for a model aircraft may be rated at 40–80 in·oz of torque. A clock escapement spring tension is typically a few in·oz.
About Barrels of Oil Equivalent (BOE)
A barrel of oil equivalent (BOE) is a unit of energy equal to the energy released by burning one barrel (42 US gallons / ~159 liters) of crude oil — approximately 6.118 GJ or 1,700 kWh. It is used by oil companies, energy agencies, and economists to compare energy resources of different types (gas, coal, renewables) on a common basis. National energy statistics and proved oil reserve figures are routinely expressed in millions or billions of BOE (MBOE, BBOE).
One BOE is roughly the energy a typical US home uses in electricity over six weeks. Global oil production runs at about 100 million BOE per day.
Inch-Ounce – Frequently Asked Questions
What are inch-ounces used for in hobby servos and RC models?
RC servo motors are rated by torque in inch-ounces (or oz·in) because the forces involved are tiny. A standard micro servo produces 40–60 in·oz, which is enough to deflect a model aircraft aileron. High-torque digital servos for 1/10-scale RC cars reach 200–400 in·oz. The inch-ounce scale gives hobbyists whole-number specs that are easy to compare.
Why do high-end RC servos specify torque at different voltages (4.8V vs 6V)?
Servo motors produce more torque at higher voltage because the motor windings draw more current and generate a stronger magnetic field. A servo rated at 60 in·oz at 4.8 V might deliver 75 in·oz at 6 V — a 25% boost. RC pilots choose voltage based on the tradeoff: 6 V gives snappier response and more holding torque for aerobatics, but draws more current and generates more heat, reducing servo lifespan. Competition flyers often run 7.4 V for maximum performance, accepting shorter gear life.
Why use inch-ounces instead of newton-meters for small torque values?
Inch-ounces give convenient whole numbers for very small torques where newton-meters would be awkward decimals (e.g., 50 in·oz ≈ 0.353 N·m). The RC hobby, miniature clockwork, and precision instrument industries in the US developed around imperial units, and the convention persists even as SI gains ground. Many datasheets now list both units side by side.
What torque in inch-ounces does a clock or watch mechanism require?
A mechanical wristwatch mainspring delivers roughly 2–5 in·oz of torque. Larger mantel clocks may have mainspring torques of 10–30 in·oz. Escapement adjustments are even finer, sometimes below 1 in·oz. Horologists use inch-ounces (or gram-centimeters) because these scales match the delicate forces in timekeeping mechanisms.
How does inch-ounce torque relate to servo motor performance in robotics?
A servo's inch-ounce rating tells you the maximum force it can exert at one inch from the output shaft. A 100 in·oz servo can hold 100 ounces (6.25 lb) at 1 inch, or 50 ounces at 2 inches. Robotics designers use this to size servos for joint loads — a small robotic arm lifting 1 lb at 4 inches needs at least 64 in·oz, plus a safety margin of 50% or more.
Barrels of Oil Equivalent – Frequently Asked Questions
How much energy is in one barrel of oil equivalent?
One BOE equals approximately 6.118 gigajoules, 1,700 kWh, or 5.8 million BTU. That is roughly the energy a US household uses in electricity over six weeks. The figure is a defined convention — actual crude oil barrels vary by 5–10% depending on whether it is light sweet crude or heavy sour crude.
Why do oil companies report reserves in BOE instead of barrels?
Because modern energy companies produce oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids. Reporting everything in BOE allows investors to compare total energy reserves across companies on one scale. Roughly 6,000 cubic feet of natural gas equals 1 BOE. Without this conversion, comparing an oil-heavy company to a gas-heavy one would be apples-to-oranges.
How many barrels of oil does the world use per day?
Global oil consumption in 2024 was approximately 102 million barrels per day — or about 102 million BOE/day just from oil. Including natural gas and coal, total world primary energy consumption is roughly 580 million BOE/day equivalent. The US alone accounts for about 20 million barrels per day.
What is the difference between BOE and an actual barrel of crude oil?
A physical barrel of crude oil is 42 US gallons (~159 liters) of liquid petroleum. A BOE is a standardized energy unit pegged to the average energy content of that barrel (6.118 GJ). Light crudes like Brent may actually yield slightly more energy per barrel, while heavy crudes yield less. The BOE smooths out these differences for accounting purposes.
How many BOE does it take to power an electric car for a year?
A typical EV driven 20,000 km/year consumes about 3,500 kWh, which is roughly 2 BOE of energy. A petrol car covering the same distance burns about 1,500 liters of fuel — approximately 9.5 BOE. The EV uses roughly one-fifth the primary energy, largely because electric motors are 85–95% efficient while combustion engines waste 60–75% as heat.