Convert Btu (IT)/hour to foot pound-force/second

Please provide values below to convert Btu (IT)/hour [Btu/h] to foot pound-force/second [ft*lbf/s], or Convert foot pound-force/second to Btu (IT)/hour.




How to Convert Btu (It)/hour to Foot Pound-Force/second

1 Btu/h = 0.216158128014163 ft*lbf/s

Example: convert 15 Btu/h to ft*lbf/s:
15 Btu/h = 15 × 0.216158128014163 ft*lbf/s = 3.24237192021244 ft*lbf/s


Btu (It)/hour to Foot Pound-Force/second Conversion Table

Btu (IT)/hour foot pound-force/second

Btu (It)/hour

Btu (IT)/hour (Btu/h) is a unit of power that measures the rate of energy transfer, specifically the amount of British thermal units (IT) transferred per hour.

History/Origin

The Btu (IT) originated from the British thermal unit used in the United States and was standardized for industrial and engineering purposes. The per-hour notation became common in applications requiring power measurement, especially in heating and cooling systems.

Current Use

Btu/h is widely used in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) industries to specify the capacity of heating and cooling equipment, as well as in energy analysis and thermodynamics.


Foot Pound-Force/second

The foot pound-force per second (ft·lbf/s) is a unit of power representing the rate of work done or energy transferred, where one foot pound-force is the work done when a force of one pound-force moves an object one foot.

History/Origin

The foot pound-force per second has been used historically in engineering and physics, especially in the United States, as a practical unit of power in mechanical and thermodynamic contexts before the widespread adoption of the SI system.

Current Use

Today, the foot pound-force per second is primarily used in certain engineering fields, such as mechanical and aerospace engineering, for expressing power in systems where imperial units are standard, though it is less common with the global shift towards SI units.



Convert Btu (IT)/hour To Other Power Units