Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter to Pound per Square Foot

kgf/cm²

1 kgf/cm²

psf

2,048.1614362440950535297314928887169195 psf

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Quick Reference Table (Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter to Pound per Square Foot)

Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter (kgf/cm²)Pound per Square Foot (psf)
0.0120.481614362440950535297314928887169195
0.1204.81614362440950535297314928887169195
12,048.1614362440950535297314928887169195
1.0332,115.750763640150190296212736581215744564
1020,481.614362440950535297314928887169195
100204,816.143624409505352973150333143403617205
300614,448.430873228516058919450999430210851615

About Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter (kgf/cm²)

The kilogram-force per square centimeter (kgf/cm²) equals approximately 98,066.5 pascals and is colloquially called one "technical atmosphere" (at). Standard atmospheric pressure is 1.033 kgf/cm², making the unit an intuitive near-equivalent to atmospheric pressure. It is widely used in Japanese and Russian engineering standards for hydraulic systems, boilers, pressure vessels, and tire pressure specifications, and appears on many industrial gauges manufactured in Asia and Eastern Europe. The unit is not part of SI but remains prevalent in legacy equipment and transitional technical contexts.

Standard atmospheric pressure is approximately 1.033 kgf/cm². Industrial hydraulic presses typically operate at 100–300 kgf/cm².

About Pound per Square Foot (psf)

The pound per square foot (psf) is a US customary unit equal to 1/144 of a psi, approximately 47.88 pascals. It is used in civil and structural engineering for soil bearing capacity, roof snow loads, wind loads on building envelopes, and floor live-load ratings in US building codes (IBC). Standard atmospheric pressure is approximately 2,116 psf. The unit is convenient for building loads that are naturally distributed over large floor or wall areas.

US building codes require residential floors to support at least 40 psf live load. A 50 mph wind exerts roughly 6–10 psf of pressure on a building facade.


Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter – Frequently Asked Questions

One technical atmosphere (symbol "at") is defined as exactly 1 kgf/cm² — the pressure exerted by a 1 kg mass on a 1 cm² area under standard gravity. It equals 98,066.5 Pa, roughly 3.6% less than a standard atmosphere (101,325 Pa). Russian and Japanese engineering standards used it heavily through the 20th century, and you will still find it on older boiler plates, hydraulic presses, and pressure vessel nameplates across Asia and Eastern Europe.

Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) and Soviet-era GOST standards specified kgf/cm² for decades, and millions of gauges, compressors, and hydraulic machines built to those specs remain in service. Replacing a working gauge just to change the scale is wasteful, so factories keep using kgf/cm² alongside newer SI instruments. Modern JIS standards accept both, but legacy equipment is everywhere.

Multiply kgf/cm² by 14.22 to get psi, or by 0.981 to get bar. For quick mental math: 1 kgf/cm² ≈ 1 bar ≈ 14.2 psi ≈ 1 atmosphere. The errors in those approximations are all under 4%, which is close enough for field work. For precision, use the exact factor: 1 kgf/cm² = 98,066.5 Pa.

Small hydraulic jacks operate at 50–100 kgf/cm². Excavator hydraulics run at 250–350 kgf/cm². Industrial presses for stamping car body panels can reach 500–1,000 kgf/cm². The highest-pressure hydraulic systems — used in forging and isostatic pressing — operate above 3,000 kgf/cm², squeezing metal powder into near-net-shape parts.

Officially, yes — the SI discourages kilogram-force entirely, and international standards bodies prefer pascals, bar, or psi. Practically, the phase-out is glacially slow. New equipment in Japan and Russia increasingly uses MPa or bar, but service manuals, legacy calibrations, and replacement parts will reference kgf/cm² for decades to come. Knowing the conversion (×0.0981 for MPa) remains a useful skill for anyone working with imported machinery.

Pound per Square Foot – Frequently Asked Questions

Because building loads — snow, wind, furniture, people — are naturally distributed over large floor and wall areas measured in square feet. A residential floor designed for 40 psf live load makes intuitive sense: imagine 40 pounds sitting on each square foot of carpet. Converting to psi (0.278 psi) gives a fraction that obscures the physical picture. The US International Building Code specifies all loads in psf for this reason.

Residential living areas: 40 psf. Office floors: 50 psf. Retail stores: 75–100 psf. Library stack rooms: 150 psf. Heavy manufacturing: 250+ psf. Balconies and decks: 60 psf minimum. Roofs must handle snow load (varies by region — 20 psf in Atlanta, 50+ psf in Minnesota) plus a minimum 20 psf construction live load. These values have decades of structural failure data baked into them.

1 psf = 1/144 psi ≈ 0.00694 psi = 47.88 Pa. To go from psi to psf, multiply by 144 (since 1 ft² = 144 in²). Standard atmospheric pressure is about 2,116 psf — which demonstrates why the unit is sized for building loads, not gas pressures. For international projects, multiply psf by 47.88 to get pascals, or by roughly 4.88 to get kgf/m².

Wind pressure scales with the square of wind speed. At 70 mph: about 12 psf. At 100 mph: ~25 psf. At 150 mph (Category 4 hurricane): ~56 psf. Building codes apply additional factors for height, exposure, and shape — a tall building in open terrain sees higher effective psf than a squat building sheltered by trees. Cladding and windows are tested against these design pressures before installation.

Rarely. Most countries use kilopascals (kPa) or kilonewtons per square meter (kN/m²) for structural loads — both are SI-compatible and numerically equivalent (1 kPa = 1 kN/m²). The psf is essentially a US-only unit, found in IBC (International Building Code, despite the name) and ASCE 7 load standards. Engineers working on international projects routinely convert psf to kPa by multiplying by 0.04788.

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