Torr to Foot Water (4 °C)

Torr

1 Torr

ftH2O

0.044604638220394739863190330093 ftH2O

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Quick Reference Table (Torr to Foot Water (4 °C))

Torr (Torr)Foot Water (4 °C) (ftH2O)
0.0010.000044604638220394739863555003
0.010.000446046382203947398632204407
0.10.004460463822039473986318698447
10.044604638220394739863190330093
100.446046382203947398631889918438
76033.899525047500002296023750898093
7,600338.995250475000022960237522363422

About Torr (Torr)

The torr is a unit of pressure equal to exactly 1/760 of a standard atmosphere, approximately 133.322 pascals — differing from the mmHg by less than 0.00015%. The torr is the dominant unit in vacuum science, surface chemistry, thin-film deposition, and mass spectrometry. High vacuum systems operate at 10⁻³–10⁻⁶ torr; ultra-high vacuum (UHV) below 10⁻⁹ torr. The torr provides convenient order-of-magnitude values across the full vacuum range from atmospheric pressure to the limits of laboratory pumping.

Freeze-drying food operates at 0.1–4 torr. The interior of a sealed vacuum tube operates at roughly 10⁻⁶ torr.

Etymology: Named after Evangelista Torricelli (1608–1647), Italian physicist and mathematician who invented the mercury barometer in 1643 and first accurately measured atmospheric pressure as the height of a mercury column.

About Foot Water (4 °C) (ftH2O)

The foot of water at 4 °C (ftH₂O) equals approximately 2,989 pascals — the pressure exerted by a 1-foot column of water at maximum density. It is used in US hydraulic engineering, pump head specifications, and well-drilling. Total dynamic head (TDH) in American water system design is expressed in feet of water. One ftH₂O equals 12 inH₂O. Firefighting system pressures and potable water distribution designs commonly reference feet of head.

A residential well pump typically delivers 40–60 ft of head. A standard building fire-sprinkler system requires 15–25 ftH₂O of minimum pressure.


Torr – Frequently Asked Questions

No — a true 0 torr vacuum is physically impossible. Even the best laboratory cryo-pumps bottom out around 10⁻¹³ torr, where stray molecules still occasionally wander through. Interstellar space is roughly 10⁻¹⁷ torr but still contains a few hydrogen atoms per cubic centimeter. Quantum field theory predicts that even "empty" space seethes with virtual particle pairs, so absolute nothingness does not exist. In practice, engineers define "good enough" vacuum levels for each application — 10⁻³ torr for freeze-drying, 10⁻⁶ for electron microscopes, 10⁻⁹ for particle accelerators.

Because the torr maps neatly to the range of vacuum pressures: rough vacuum is 1–760 torr, medium vacuum 10⁻³–1 torr, high vacuum 10⁻⁶–10⁻³ torr, and ultra-high vacuum below 10⁻⁹ torr. Each regime is a clean power of ten. Expressing the same range in pascals (133,000 down to 0.00000013 Pa) is clumsy. The torr gives vacuum engineers a log-friendly scale that spans thirteen orders of magnitude in tidy notation.

Routine lab turbo-pump systems reach 10⁻⁸ torr. Particle accelerators like CERN's LHC operate at about 10⁻¹⁰ torr — comparable to the vacuum of outer space near the Moon. The lowest laboratory pressure ever achieved is around 10⁻¹³ torr, using cryogenic pumps at liquid-helium temperatures. At that level, a molecule might travel thousands of kilometers before hitting another molecule.

Freeze-drying food and pharmaceuticals operates at 0.1–4 torr. Vacuum-sealed food storage bags pull to about 5–10 torr. Incandescent light bulbs were historically evacuated to ~0.01 torr. Vacuum-assisted braking in cars uses roughly 400–500 torr of manifold vacuum. Even your thermos flask has a vacuum of perhaps 10⁻³ torr between its double walls to block heat conduction.

Boiling point plummets. Water boils at 100 °C at 760 torr (sea level), but at only 25 °C at about 24 torr and at 0 °C at just 4.6 torr. This is how freeze-drying works: reduce pressure to 0.1–1 torr and ice sublimates directly to vapor without ever becoming liquid. Vacuum distillation in chemistry exploits the same principle — heat-sensitive compounds that would decompose at their normal boiling point can be distilled gently at a fraction of the temperature under reduced torr.

Foot Water (4 °C) – Frequently Asked Questions

Because every foot of elevation equals exactly 1 ftH₂O of pressure at the tap below. A comfortable shower needs about 20–25 ftH₂O, and a fire hydrant demands 40–60 ftH₂O. So a water tower serving a flat town typically stands 40–60 feet above rooftop level to guarantee adequate pressure during peak demand. Taller buildings in the service area need even more height — or booster pumps — because each story above ground "uses up" about 10 ftH₂O of the tower's gravity-supplied head.

1 ftH₂O = 0.4335 psi. So divide psi by 0.4335 (or multiply by 2.31) to get feet of head. A city water main at 60 psi delivers about 138 ft of head — enough to reach the 12th floor of a building by gravity alone. This 2.31 factor is worth memorising if you work in US plumbing or fire-protection engineering; it pops up in every pipe-sizing calculation.

Because the physical setup is literally vertical — a well pump sits at the bottom of a hole and pushes water up. Saying "the pump needs 150 feet of head" maps directly to the well depth plus the elevation to the pressure tank. Converting to psi (65 psi) loses that physical clarity. Fire-sprinkler designers think the same way: "how high does water need to climb?" is answered in feet, not pounds.

1 ftH₂O = 12 inH₂O, just as 1 foot = 12 inches. Inches of water are used for low-pressure air systems (HVAC ducts at 0.1–4 inH₂O), while feet of water handle higher liquid pressures (municipal water at 40–140 ftH₂O). The two scales cover different engineering domains but share the same underlying physics — pressure from a column of water at 4 °C under standard gravity.

About 1 atmosphere (14.7 psi). Divers learn the "33 feet" rule: every 33 feet of seawater adds 1 atm of pressure. (Fresh water is slightly less dense, so the equivalent is about 34 feet.) At 100 feet, a diver is under roughly 4 atm total — 3 gauge plus 1 atmospheric. This is why recreational dive limits are set at 130 ft (about 5 atm) — beyond that, nitrogen narcosis becomes a serious risk.

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