chains (ch) to Feet (ft) conversion

1 ch = 66 ftftch
Formula
1 ch = 66 ft

Understanding chains to Feet Conversion

The chain (ch) is a classic surveying unit defined by Edmund Gunter as exactly 66 feet, or 100 links, and it underpins much of the US Public Land Survey System. The foot (ft) is the fundamental US customary and imperial unit of length. Since one chain is defined as 66 feet, this conversion is exact and appears constantly when reading old survey plats, deeds, and section lines, where distances recorded in chains must be laid out or checked in feet.

Conversion Formula

1 ch=66 ft1\ \text{ch} = 66\ \text{ft}

To convert chains to Feet, multiply by this factor:

ft=ch×66\text{ft} = \text{ch} \times 66

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 chains to Feet.

ft=25×66=1650 ft\text{ft} = 25 \times 66 = 1650\ \text{ft}

How to Convert chains to Feet

The chain is defined as 66 feet, making this an exact one-step conversion.

  1. Take the chain value: Start with the length in chains, for example 25 ch.
  2. Multiply by 66: Since one chain equals exactly 66 feet by definition.
  3. Compute: 25×66=165025 \times 66 = 1650.
  4. State the result: 25 chains equals 1650 feet.

chains to Feet conversion table

chains (ch)Feet (ft)
00
166
2132
3198
4264
5330
6396
7462
8528
9594
10660
15990
201320
251650
301980
402640
503300
603960
704620
805280
905940
1006600
1509900
20013200
25016500
30019800
40026400
50033000
60039600
70046200
80052800
90059400
100066000
2000132000
3000198000
4000264000
5000330000
10000660000
250001650000
500003300000
1000006600000
25000016500000
50000033000000
100000066000000

What is the chain?

The chain (ch) is a unit of length in the imperial and US customary systems, equal to 66 feet, traditionally used in surveying and land measurement.

Definition

One chain equals 66 feet, or 22 yards, or 4 rods.

1 ch=20.1168 m1\ \text{ch} = 20.1168\ \text{m}

There are 80 chains in a mile and 10 square chains in an acre. This value uses the international foot; the US survey chain is larger by a factor of 1200/1199, giving about 20.11684 m.

Origin and History

The chain is named for Gunter's chain, a physical measuring device introduced by the English clergyman and mathematician Edmund Gunter around 1620. It consisted of 100 iron links totalling 66 feet, elegantly bridging the traditional (base-4/16.5) and decimal systems: distances could be recorded in decimal links yet still yield whole numbers of acres and miles. It became the standard tool of English and American surveyors for centuries.

Law and Notable Facts

The chain underpins the US Public Land Survey System, in which section lines and township grids were laid out in chains. A cricket pitch measures exactly one chain (22 yards) between the wickets—a lasting everyday trace of the unit. The chain is now largely obsolete outside historical land records and cricket.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A cricket pitch is 1 chain = 22 yards = 66 ft long.
  • 1 chain = 100 links = 4 rods = 20.1168 m.
  • 80 chains = 1 statute mile.
  • An acre is 1 chain by 10 chains (10 square chains).

What is the foot?

Understanding Feet

The foot is a unit of length in several different systems, including the US Customary Units and the British Imperial System. It's commonly used to measure lengths and distances in everyday contexts.

Definition and History

The foot is defined as exactly 12 inches. One international foot is equal to 0.3048 meters.

1 foot=12 inches=0.3048 meters1 \text{ foot} = 12 \text{ inches} = 0.3048 \text{ meters}

Historically, the foot was based on the human foot, but its length varied across different regions and times. The standardization of the foot measurement helped bring uniformity to various applications. Check out this Wikipedia article on Foot for more history.

Notable Associations

While there isn't a specific "law" tied directly to the foot, its consistent use in various fields like construction, sports, and real estate makes it a foundational unit. No specific person is heavily associated with the unit of measurement.

Real-World Examples

  • Height: People often measure their height in feet and inches (e.g., 5 feet 10 inches).
  • Room Dimensions: Room sizes are frequently described in feet (e.g., 12 feet by 15 feet).
  • Sports Fields: Field dimensions in sports like American football (where yards are used) are based on feet (3 feet in one yard).
  • Construction: Lumber and building materials are often sold in foot increments.

Conversions

Here are some common conversions involving feet:

  • Feet to Inches: Multiply the number of feet by 12.

    Inches=Feet×12\text{Inches} = \text{Feet} \times 12

  • Feet to Meters: Multiply the number of feet by 0.3048.

    Meters=Feet×0.3048\text{Meters} = \text{Feet} \times 0.3048

  • Feet to Yards: Divide the number of feet by 3.

    Yards=Feet3\text{Yards} = \frac{\text{Feet}}{3}

Frequently Asked Questions

How many feet are in one chain?

Exactly 66 feet, which is the defining length of the surveyor's (Gunter's) chain.

How does the chain relate to other survey units?

A chain is 4 rods, 100 links, or 1/80 of a mile, and 10 square chains make one acre.

How many chains are in one foot?

About 0.0151515 chains, the reciprocal of 66.

What is 25 chains in feet?

Multiply 25 by 66 to get 1650 feet.

Why is the chain still relevant in the United States?

The Public Land Survey System laid out sections and townships in chains, so property boundaries, section lines, and legal descriptions still reference them, requiring conversion to feet for layout.

Complete chains conversion table

ch
UnitResult
Nanometers (nm)20116800000 nm
Micrometers (μm)20116800 μm
Millimeters (mm)20116.8 mm
Centimeters (cm)2011.68 cm
Decimeters (dm)201.168 dm
Meters (m)20.1168 m
Kilometers (km)0.0201168 km
light-years (ly)2.126347e-15 ly
astronomical units (au)1.344725e-10 au
parsecs (pc)6.519411e-16 pc
ångströms (angstrom)201168000000 angstrom
Mils (mil)792000 mil
Inches (in)792 in
Yards (yd)22 yd
US Survey Feet (ft-us)65.99987 ft-us
Feet (ft)66 ft
Fathoms (fathom)11 fathom
Miles (mi)0.0125 mi
Nautical Miles (nMi)0.0108622 nMi
rods (rd)4 rd
furlongs (fur)0.1 fur
hands (hh)198 hh