Understanding chains to US Survey Feet Conversion
The chain is an imperial surveying unit of 66 feet, foundational to the US Public Land Survey System. The US survey foot is a legacy definition of the foot (1200/3937 meter) that differs very slightly from the international foot and remains in older American geodetic and cadastral data. Converting chains to US survey feet keeps historical survey figures internally consistent within that system.
Conversion Formula
To convert chains to US survey feet, multiply by this factor:
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 25 chains to US survey feet.
How to Convert chains to US Survey Feet
The chain expressed in US survey feet is 65.99987, just shy of 66 international feet.
- Note the chains: Start from the length in chains.
- Multiply by 65.99987: Apply US survey feet per chain.
- Mind the precision: Keep the small offset from 66 for geodetic accuracy.
- Worked result: 25 chains × 65.99987 = 1,649.997 US survey feet.
chains to US Survey Feet conversion table
| chains (ch) | US Survey Feet (ft-us) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 65.99987 |
| 2 | 131.9997 |
| 3 | 197.9996 |
| 4 | 263.9995 |
| 5 | 329.9993 |
| 6 | 395.9992 |
| 7 | 461.9991 |
| 8 | 527.9989 |
| 9 | 593.9988 |
| 10 | 659.9987 |
| 15 | 989.998 |
| 20 | 1319.997 |
| 25 | 1649.997 |
| 30 | 1979.996 |
| 40 | 2639.995 |
| 50 | 3299.993 |
| 60 | 3959.992 |
| 70 | 4619.991 |
| 80 | 5279.989 |
| 90 | 5939.988 |
| 100 | 6599.987 |
| 150 | 9899.98 |
| 200 | 13199.97 |
| 250 | 16499.97 |
| 300 | 19799.96 |
| 400 | 26399.95 |
| 500 | 32999.93 |
| 600 | 39599.92 |
| 700 | 46199.91 |
| 800 | 52799.89 |
| 900 | 59399.88 |
| 1000 | 65999.87 |
| 2000 | 131999.7 |
| 3000 | 197999.6 |
| 4000 | 263999.5 |
| 5000 | 329999.3 |
| 10000 | 659998.7 |
| 25000 | 1649997 |
| 50000 | 3299993 |
| 100000 | 6599987 |
| 250000 | 16499970 |
| 500000 | 32999930 |
| 1000000 | 65999870 |
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.
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 us survey foot?
What is US Survey Feet?
US Survey Feet is a unit of length used in the United States for land surveying. It is slightly different from the international foot. Understanding its origin and applications is crucial for accurate land measurements and legal descriptions.
Origin and Definition
The US Survey Foot (ftUS) is defined based on the Mendenhall Order of 1893, which related customary units to the metric system using the meter. At that time, it was defined as:
1 US Survey Foot = meters
This value equates to approximately 0.3048006096 meters. This differs slightly from the international foot which is exactly 0.3048 meters. The difference, while seemingly small (2 parts per million), can accumulate significantly over large distances, impacting land boundaries and area calculations.
The Issue & Readjustment
The difference between the international foot and the US survey foot caused discrepancies, especially in states that relied heavily on the Public Land Survey System (PLSS). Over time, states have addressed this issue in various ways:
- Many states have officially adopted the international foot for all new surveys.
- Some states continue to use the US Survey Foot. It's crucial to know which definition is in use for any particular survey or land description.
- Conversion factors are often provided in legal documents to clarify which foot is being used.
For more information about each state's definitions of feet, please read NOAA's definition of US Survey foot.
Usage and Real-World Examples
While its use is declining, the US Survey Foot is still relevant in some contexts, especially when dealing with older surveys and legal descriptions. Understanding its magnitude helps grasp spatial relationships:
- Property Boundaries: In states where it is still used, a land description stating a lot is 100 US Survey Feet wide means it is approximately 30.48006096 meters wide.
- Land Area Calculations: Area calculations, like acres, derived from measurements in US Survey Feet will differ slightly from those derived from international feet.
- Geographic Information Systems (GIS): GIS databases may contain data referenced to US Survey Feet, requiring proper transformation when integrating with data using the international foot.
Interesting Facts
- The slight difference between the two definitions of a foot has caused legal disputes related to property boundaries.
- The National Geodetic Survey (NGS) provides tools and resources for converting between the US Survey Foot and the international foot.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many US survey feet are in one chain?
One chain equals about 65.99987 US survey feet, marginally less than the nominal 66 international feet because of the survey-foot definition.
Why isn't a chain exactly 66 US survey feet?
The chain of 20.1168 meters is defined in international feet; expressing it in the slightly longer US survey foot yields 65.99987.
How do I convert chains to US survey feet?
Multiply the number of chains by 65.99987. The difference from 66 matters only for high-precision geodetic work.
When does the survey-foot distinction matter?
It matters in large-scale state-plane and cadastral surveys where the tiny discrepancy accumulates over long distances.
What is 25 chains in US survey feet?
25 chains equal about 1,649.997 US survey feet (25 × 65.99987).
People also convert
Complete chains conversion table
| Unit | Result |
|---|---|
| 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 |