Understanding Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute Conversion
A cubic foot per hour (ft3/h) is an imperial flow rate of one cubic foot — about 28.317 liters — per hour, standard for gas metering. An imperial gallon per minute (imp-gal/min) measures flow in UK imperial gallons of 4.54609 liters each minute. Converting from a per-hour to a per-minute basis divides by 60 while rescaling the volume unit, so one cubic foot per hour is only about 0.104 imperial gallons per minute. This pairing is useful when a slow hourly throughput must be compared with pump ratings quoted per minute.
Conversion Formula
To convert Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute, multiply the number of Cubic feet per hour by this factor:
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 25 Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute.
Write the formula:
Substitute the value:
Calculate the result:
How to Convert Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute
Convert an hourly cubic-foot flow into imperial gallons per minute with one factor.
- Note the flow: Take the rate in cubic feet per hour (ft3/h).
- Multiply by the factor: Multiply by 0.103814, the imperial gallons per minute in one cubic foot per hour.
- Report in imp-gal/min: The result is the flow in imperial gallons per minute.
- Check: 25 ft3/h × 0.103814 ≈ 2.59535 imp-gal/min.
Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute conversion table
| Cubic feet per hour (ft3/h) | Imperial Gallons per Minute (imp-gal/min) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 0.1038139 |
| 2 | 0.2076278 |
| 3 | 0.3114418 |
| 4 | 0.4152557 |
| 5 | 0.5190696 |
| 6 | 0.6228835 |
| 7 | 0.7266975 |
| 8 | 0.8305114 |
| 9 | 0.9343253 |
| 10 | 1.038139 |
| 15 | 1.557209 |
| 20 | 2.076278 |
| 25 | 2.595348 |
| 30 | 3.114418 |
| 40 | 4.152557 |
| 50 | 5.190696 |
| 60 | 6.228835 |
| 70 | 7.266975 |
| 80 | 8.305114 |
| 90 | 9.343253 |
| 100 | 10.38139 |
| 150 | 15.57209 |
| 200 | 20.76278 |
| 250 | 25.95348 |
| 300 | 31.14418 |
| 400 | 41.52557 |
| 500 | 51.90696 |
| 600 | 62.28835 |
| 700 | 72.66975 |
| 800 | 83.05114 |
| 900 | 93.43253 |
| 1000 | 103.8139 |
| 2000 | 207.6278 |
| 3000 | 311.4418 |
| 4000 | 415.2557 |
| 5000 | 519.0696 |
| 10000 | 1038.139 |
| 25000 | 2595.348 |
| 50000 | 5190.696 |
| 100000 | 10381.39 |
| 250000 | 25953.48 |
| 500000 | 51906.96 |
| 1000000 | 103813.9 |
What is Cubic feet per hour?
Cubic feet per hour (CFH) is a unit used to measure the volumetric flow rate. It represents the volume of a substance (gas or liquid) that passes through a specific area per hour, measured in cubic feet. It's a common unit in various fields, especially when dealing with gas and air flow.
Definition of Cubic Feet per Hour
Cubic feet per hour (CFH) is defined as the volume of a substance, measured in cubic feet, that flows past a point in one hour.
How CFH is Formed
CFH is derived from the basic units of volume (cubic feet) and time (hour). It directly expresses how many cubic feet of a substance move within one hour. No special law or constant is specifically tied to the definition of CFH itself. It is a direct measure of flow rate, useful in practical applications.
Calculating Volume Flow Rate
The volume flow rate (Q) in cubic feet per hour can be determined using the following formula:
Where:
- = Volume flow rate (ft³/hour)
- = Cross-sectional area of the flow (ft²)
- = Average velocity of the flow (ft/hour)
Another way to calculate it is:
Where:
- = Volume flow rate (ft³/hour)
- = Volume (ft³)
- = Time (hours)
Real-World Examples of CFH
- Natural Gas Consumption: Home appliances like furnaces, water heaters, and stoves are rated in terms of CFH to indicate their natural gas consumption. A typical furnace might consume 80-120 CFH of natural gas.
- HVAC Systems: Air conditioning and ventilation systems use CFH to measure the airflow rate in ductwork. A residential HVAC system might require airflow rates between 400 and 1600 CFH, depending on the size of the home.
- Compressed Air Systems: Pneumatic tools and equipment in factories use compressed air. The compressor output is often rated in CFH or cubic feet per minute (CFM, which can easily be converted to CFH by multiplying by 60) to indicate the volume of air it can supply.
- Industrial Processes: Many industrial processes, such as chemical manufacturing or food processing, involve controlling the flow rate of liquids or gases. CFH can be used to specify the desired flow rate of a particular fluid. For example, a chemical reactor might require a flow of 50 CFH of nitrogen gas.
- Ventilation Systems: Exhaust fans in bathrooms or kitchens are often rated in CFM (cubic feet per minute), which can be converted to CFH. A typical bathroom exhaust fan might be rated at 50-100 CFM, which equals 3000-6000 CFH.
What is the Imperial Gallon per Minute?
The imperial gallon per minute is a unit of volumetric flow rate, measuring how many imperial (UK) gallons of liquid pass a point each minute. It is common in British and Commonwealth plumbing, pumping, and irrigation specifications.
Definition
One imperial gallon per minute equals one imperial gallon (4.54609 litres exactly) of volume flowing every 60 seconds:
Because the imperial gallon is defined as exactly 4.54609 L, the exact relation is L/s. Note that the imperial gallon is about 20% larger than the US liquid gallon (3.785411784 L), so an imperial gpm is a larger flow than a US gpm.
Origin and History
The imperial gallon dates to the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824, which fixed it as the volume of 10 pounds of distilled water. It was redefined in 1976 (effective 1985) as exactly 4.54609 litres. The "per minute" flow rate arose naturally from waterworks and pump ratings, where minutes are a convenient interval for reading meters and sizing equipment.
Law and Notable Facts
The imperial gallon remains a legal unit in the United Kingdom and several Commonwealth nations, though the litre per second and cubic metre per hour are the SI-based standards for engineering. A tap flowing at 1 imp-gal/min delivers about 4.55 litres every minute; UK water-efficiency guidance often rates fittings in litres per minute, where 1 imp-gal/min corresponds to roughly 4.55 L/min.
Real-World Examples and Conversions
- A typical domestic kitchen tap or shower flows around 2 to 3 imp-gal/min (about 9 to 14 L/min).
- 1 imp-gal/min equals 60 imperial gallons per hour, or approximately 4.546 cubic metres per hour when multiplied out over an hour ( litres/hour, i.e. 0.27277 m³/h).
- To convert to US gallons per minute, multiply by 1.20095: 1 imp-gal/min ≈ 1.201 US gpm.
- A small garden pump rated at 10 imp-gal/min moves about 0.758 litres per second, enough to fill a 200-litre water butt in roughly 4.4 minutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the formula to convert Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute?
Multiply the flow in cubic feet per hour by 0.103814: imp-gal/min = ft3/h × 0.103814. The factor combines dividing by 60 minutes with the cubic-foot-to-imperial-gallon ratio.
How many Imperial Gallons per Minute are in 1 Cubic foot per hour?
One cubic foot per hour equals about 0.103814 imperial gallons per minute. Reversed, one imperial gallon per minute is about 9.63262 cubic feet per hour.
How do I convert 60 Cubic feet per hour to Imperial Gallons per Minute?
Multiply 60 by 0.103814 to get about 6.22884 imperial gallons per minute. That equals the roughly 6.23 imperial gallons that flow in one hour, now expressed per minute.
Does this conversion use the US or imperial gallon?
It uses the imperial (UK) gallon of 4.54609 liters, which is about 20% larger than the US gallon. Using US gallons would raise the per-minute count.
When is this conversion helpful?
It helps when an hourly gas or fluid rate must be checked against pump or nozzle specifications that are commonly given in gallons per minute.