Understanding Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute Conversion
A cup per second (cup/s) is a flow of one US customary cup, 236.588 millilitres, each second. An Imperial gallon per minute (imp-gal/min) counts UK Imperial gallons of 4.54609 litres per minute. The conversion combines a cup-to-gallon volume change with a per-second to per-minute time change, a factor of 60. Because a US cup is much smaller than an Imperial gallon while a minute is 60 seconds, the two effects partly offset and the factor stays near 3. This is useful for small dispensing or lab flows.
Conversion Formula
To convert Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute, multiply the number of Cups per second by this factor:
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 25 Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute.
Write the formula:
Substitute the value:
Calculate the result:
How to Convert Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute
Follow these steps to convert a per-second cup flow into Imperial gallons per minute.
- Note the flow rate: Record the value in cups per second (cup/s).
- Apply the factor: Multiply that value by 3.12253, the Imperial gallons per minute in one cup per second.
- Read the result: The product gives the flow in Imperial gallons per minute (imp-gal/min).
- Check with an example: 25 cup/s × 3.12253 ≈ 78.0632 imp-gal/min.
Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute conversion table
| Cups per second (cup/s) | Imperial Gallons per Minute (imp-gal/min) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 3.122528 |
| 2 | 6.245056 |
| 3 | 9.367585 |
| 4 | 12.49011 |
| 5 | 15.61264 |
| 6 | 18.73517 |
| 7 | 21.8577 |
| 8 | 24.98023 |
| 9 | 28.10275 |
| 10 | 31.22528 |
| 15 | 46.83792 |
| 20 | 62.45056 |
| 25 | 78.0632 |
| 30 | 93.67585 |
| 40 | 124.9011 |
| 50 | 156.1264 |
| 60 | 187.3517 |
| 70 | 218.577 |
| 80 | 249.8023 |
| 90 | 281.0275 |
| 100 | 312.2528 |
| 150 | 468.3792 |
| 200 | 624.5056 |
| 250 | 780.632 |
| 300 | 936.7585 |
| 400 | 1249.011 |
| 500 | 1561.264 |
| 600 | 1873.517 |
| 700 | 2185.77 |
| 800 | 2498.023 |
| 900 | 2810.275 |
| 1000 | 3122.528 |
| 2000 | 6245.056 |
| 3000 | 9367.585 |
| 4000 | 12490.11 |
| 5000 | 15612.64 |
| 10000 | 31225.28 |
| 25000 | 78063.2 |
| 50000 | 156126.4 |
| 100000 | 312252.8 |
| 250000 | 780632 |
| 500000 | 1561264 |
| 1000000 | 3122528 |
What is the cup per second?
Cups per second is a unit of measure for volume flow rate, indicating the amount of volume that passes through a cross-sectional area per unit of time. It's a measure of how quickly something is flowing.
Understanding Cups per Second
Cups per second (cups/s) is a unit used to quantify the volume of a substance that passes through a specific point or area in one second. It's part of a broader family of volume flow rate units, which also includes liters per second, gallons per minute, and cubic meters per hour.
How is it Formed?
Cups per second is derived by dividing a volume measurement (in cups) by a time measurement (in seconds).
- Volume: A cup is a unit of volume. In the US customary system, a cup is equal to 8 fluid ounces.
- Time: A second is the base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI).
Therefore, 1 cup/s means that one cup of a substance flows past a certain point in one second.
Calculating Volume Flow Rate
The general formula for volume flow rate () is:
Where:
- is the volume flow rate.
- is the volume of the substance.
- is the time it takes for that volume to flow.
Conversions
- 1 US cup = 236.588 milliliters (mL)
- 1 cup/s = 0.236588 liters per second (L/s)
Real-World Examples and Applications
While cups per second might not be a standard industrial measurement, it can be useful for illustrating flow rates in relatable terms:
- Pouring Beverages: Imagine a bartender quickly pouring a drink. They might pour approximately 1 cup of liquid in 1 second, equating to a flow rate of 1 cup/s.
- Small-Scale Liquid Dispensing: A machine dispensing precise amounts of liquid, such as in a pharmaceutical or food production setting, could operate at a rate expressible in cups per second. For instance, filling small medicine cups or condiment portions.
- Estimating Water Flow: If you are filling a container, you can use cups per second to measure how fast you are filling that container. For example, you can use it to calculate how long it takes for the water to drain from a sink.
Historical Context and Notable Figures
There isn't a specific law or famous figure directly associated with cups per second as a unit. However, the broader study of fluid dynamics has roots in the work of scientists and engineers like:
- Archimedes: Known for his work on buoyancy and fluid displacement.
- Daniel Bernoulli: Developed Bernoulli's principle, which relates fluid speed to pressure.
- Osborne Reynolds: Famous for the Reynolds number, which helps predict flow patterns in fluids.
Practical Implications
Understanding volume flow rate is crucial in various fields:
- Engineering: Designing pipelines, irrigation systems, and hydraulic systems.
- Medicine: Measuring blood flow in arteries and veins.
- Environmental Science: Assessing river discharge and pollution dispersion.
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 Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute?
Multiply the flow in cups per second by 3.12253. In symbols, imp-gal/min = cup/s × 3.12253.
How many Imperial Gallons per Minute are in 1 Cup per second?
One cup per second equals about 3.12253 Imperial gallons per minute, since 60 cups per minute is roughly 3.12 Imperial gallons.
How do I convert 8 Cups per second to Imperial Gallons per Minute?
Multiply 8 by 3.12253 to get about 24.9802 Imperial gallons per minute.
Which cup and gallon are used here?
The US customary cup of 236.588 mL and the UK Imperial gallon of 4.54609 litres, so results differ from metric-cup or US-gallon conversions.
How do I convert back to cups per second?
Multiply the Imperial-gallons-per-minute value by 0.320253, the reciprocal of 3.12253.