Joules/second to Foot pounds-force minute

J/s

1 J/s

ft·lbf/min

44.25372895651575486726 ft·lbf/min

Conversion History

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1 J/s (Joules/second) → 44.25372895651575486726 ft·lbf/min (Foot pounds-force minute)

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Quick Reference Table (Joules/second to Foot pounds-force minute)

Joules/second (J/s)Foot pounds-force minute (ft·lbf/min)
144.25372895651575486726
10442.53728956515754867255
602,655.2237373909452920353
1004,425.37289565157548672551
80035,402.98316521260389380406
1,20053,104.47474781890584070609
2,00088,507.45791303150973451015

About Joules/second (J/s)

Joules per second (J/s) is the dimensional expression of power in the SI system, and is exactly equivalent to the watt by definition. While "watt" is the named unit used in practice, J/s appears in physics derivations, dimensional analysis, and engineering calculations where explicit unit tracking is required. Seeing power written as J/s emphasizes the energy-per-time nature of the quantity and connects power directly to the joule and second without introducing a derived unit name.

A 100 W light bulb consumes 100 J/s of electrical energy. A person climbing stairs at moderate pace expends roughly 300 J/s of mechanical power.

About Foot pounds-force minute (ft·lbf/min)

Foot pounds-force per minute (ft·lbf/min) equals approximately 0.02260 watts. It is used in US mechanical engineering for low-power applications and in the historical definition of horsepower: one horsepower was defined by James Watt as 33,000 ft·lbf/min — the rate at which a horse could lift coal from a mine. This unit is now mostly encountered in legacy engineering references and historical machinery specifications.

One mechanical horsepower = 33,000 ft·lbf/min. A hand-cranked generator might produce 2,000–5,000 ft·lbf/min of mechanical power output.


Joules/second – Frequently Asked Questions

In dimensional analysis and physics derivations, writing J/s keeps the units transparent — you can see exactly what's being divided and multiplied. If you're calculating power as force × velocity (N·m/s = J/s), keeping it as J/s avoids a mental leap. Students and textbook authors prefer it when teaching the concept of power, because "energy per time" is more intuitive than a named unit. Once you understand it, you switch to watts for brevity.

The SI system officially defines the watt as the named unit for power, with J/s as its definition. In metrology documents and BIPM publications, you'll see W = J/s = kg·m²/s³. Some ISO standards for calorimetry and heat flow measurements express power in J/s to maintain consistency with energy measurements also given in joules. In practice, scientific papers in thermodynamics and physical chemistry often prefer J/s for clarity.

It makes unit cancellation visible. If you know a machine delivers 500 J of work over 10 seconds, writing 500 J ÷ 10 s = 50 J/s is a complete, self-checking calculation. Converting immediately to "50 W" obscures the path. In thermodynamics, where you track joules of heat, joules of work, and joules per second of power flow, keeping J/s prevents sign and unit errors that plague students.

J/s = W = V·A = kg·m²/s³. Each form has its domain: electrical engineers think V·A, mechanical engineers think N·m/s, and physicists think kg·m²/s³. The beauty of SI is that they're all identical. A volt is a J/C, an ampere is C/s, so V·A = J/C × C/s = J/s. This chain of definitions means you can derive any electrical quantity from mass, length, time, and current.

Never — they are exactly identical by definition, with zero rounding or conversion error. 1 J/s = 1 W, always. This is unlike, say, calories per second vs. watts, where a conversion factor (4.184) introduces potential rounding issues. The equivalence is definitional, not empirical. If someone claims a difference exists, they're confusing joules per second with some other energy-per-time unit like calories per second or BTU per hour.

Foot pounds-force minute – Frequently Asked Questions

The pump horsepower formula HP = (GPM × Head in ft) / 3,960 hides a chain of unit conversions. Water weighs 8.33 lb per US gallon. Multiplying GPM × Head × 8.33 gives ft·lbf/min. Dividing by 33,000 ft·lbf/min per hp gives horsepower. So 33,000 ÷ 8.33 ≈ 3,960. The number is so ubiquitous in US mechanical engineering that pump designers recognize it on sight, yet few remember the derivation. It breaks down for fluids other than water — multiply by specific gravity for anything denser or lighter.

Lifting 330 lbs (150 kg) at 100 feet per minute — roughly the speed of a slow freight elevator. Or lifting 33 lbs at 1,000 ft/min (a fast dumbwaiter). A human on a bicycle sustainably produces about 5,000–10,000 ft·lbf/min (0.15–0.3 hp). A small outboard boat motor produces about 165,000 ft·lbf/min (5 hp). The unit makes intuitive sense for lifting and hoisting — the original application Watt cared about.

Historical convention and practical timescale. Mine hoists, waterwheels, and early steam engines operated at rates naturally measured per minute — the machinery completed one cycle every few seconds to minutes. Watt himself measured horses per minute because that's how mine work was timed. The per-minute unit also gives larger, more manageable numbers: "33,000 ft·lbf/min" is easier to work with than "550 ft·lbf/s" when you're doing longhand arithmetic in 1780.

A healthy adult can sustain about 4,000–6,000 ft·lbf/min (roughly 90–135 W or 0.12–0.18 hp) of useful mechanical work for hours — think steady cycling or rowing. Short bursts reach 15,000–25,000 ft·lbf/min (0.5–0.75 hp). Elite cyclists sustain 12,000+ ft·lbf/min (0.4 hp) for an hour. By Watt's definition, a horse sustains 33,000 ft·lbf/min, meaning one horse ≈ 5–8 sustained humans. The ancient rule of "ten slaves per horse" wasn't far off.

Yes — it's embedded in US pump and fan engineering. The formula for pump horsepower is: HP = (GPM × Head in ft × Specific Gravity) / 3,960, where 3,960 = 33,000 / (8.33 lb/gal). The number 33,000 ft·lbf/min lurks inside every US pump sizing calculation, even if the engineer never writes it explicitly. It also appears in ASME standards for hoists, cranes, and elevators — anywhere lifting power needs to be specified.

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