Meter Water (4 °C) to Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter

mH2O

1 mH2O

kgf/cm²

0.0999972467662319857822923220460272146 kgf/cm²

Conversion History

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1 mH2O (Meter Water (4 °C)) → 0.0999972467662319857822923220460272146 kgf/cm² (Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter)

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Quick Reference Table (Meter Water (4 °C) to Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter)

Meter Water (4 °C) (mH2O)Kilogram-force per Square Centimeter (kgf/cm²)
0.10.0099997246766231985782292627960891108
10.0999972467662319857822923220460272146
100.9999724676623198578229234244035147416
302.999917402986959573468770171238922927
605.999834805973919146937540342477845854
1009.9997246766231985782292338361486622248
1,033103.2971559095176413131079854988636268188

About Meter Water (4 °C) (mH2O)

The meter of water at 4 °C (mH₂O) equals approximately 9,806.4 pascals — the pressure exerted by a 1-meter column of water at maximum density. It is used in hydrology, hydraulics, and pump engineering to express gauge pressures in water systems. Pump head and pipeline friction losses in water distribution are quoted in meters of water column. Every 10 meters of seawater depth adds approximately 1 bar of pressure, making this unit intuitive for diving and underwater engineering.

A 10 m swimming pool depth corresponds to 10 mH₂O of gauge pressure. Municipal water mains typically operate at 20–60 mH₂O.

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.


Meter Water (4 °C) – Frequently Asked Questions

Because pump engineers think in terms of how high the pump can lift water. A pump rated at 30 mH₂O can push water 30 meters straight up — no conversion needed to figure out if it can reach the tenth floor. The unit also makes friction-loss calculations intuitive: if a 100-meter horizontal pipe run has 5 mH₂O of friction loss, you subtract that directly from the pump's head rating.

Exactly 1 meter. That is the beauty of this unit — depth in meters of fresh water equals gauge pressure in mH₂O (seawater is about 2.5% denser, so 1 m depth = ~1.025 mH₂O). A 10-meter pool exerts 10 mH₂O at the bottom, which is why your ears hurt at the deep end. Divers experience roughly 10 mH₂O of additional pressure for every 10 meters of descent.

Municipal water mains deliver 20–60 mH₂O (roughly 2–6 bar or 30–85 psi) at the meter. A gravity-fed rooftop tank 10 meters above the tap provides about 10 mH₂O — barely enough for a decent shower, which is why booster pumps are common in buildings with rooftop storage. High-rise buildings need pressurisation systems because gravity alone cannot push water above about 60 mH₂O without boosting.

10.33 mH₂O ≈ 1 atmosphere ≈ 1.013 bar. For quick math: 10 mH₂O ≈ 1 bar (error about 2%). This rule of thumb is used constantly in plumbing and fire protection: a building with a water tank 40 m above ground level has roughly 4 bar of static pressure at the base. Multiply meters by 0.1 and you have bar — close enough for pipe sizing.

Water is densest at 3.98 °C, which gives a reproducible standard: at 4 °C, a 1-meter column of water exerts exactly 9,806.38 Pa. At 20 °C the density drops by ~0.2%, and at 80 °C by ~2.8%. For pump and plumbing work the difference is trivial, but calibration laboratories and instrument manufacturers specify 4 °C to maintain traceability across measurements worldwide.

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.

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