Understanding Gallons per minute to Imperial Gallons per Minute Conversion
Both gallons per minute (gal/min) and imperial gallons per minute (imp-gal/min) express volume flow rate — how much fluid moves past a point per unit of time. A gallon per minute measures a US gallon of 3.785411784 litres passing a point each minute, while an imperial gallon per minute measures an imperial (UK) gallon of 4.54609 litres. This conversion comes up in plumbing, irrigation, pump sizing, HVAC and fluid-engineering work where flow specs are quoted in different unit systems. Note the imperial/US distinction: the UK imperial gallon (4.54609 L) is about 20% larger than the US gallon (3.785411784 L), so the two figures are genuinely different — mixing them up under-sizes or over-sizes a system.
Conversion Formula
To convert gallons per minute to imperial gallons per minute, multiply by the fixed factor below:
So the rule is simply: imp-gal/min = gal/min × 0.8326741846744. To go the other way, multiply by .
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 11 gal/min to imp-gal/min.
Write the formula, substitute the value, then calculate:
So 11 gal/min equals imp-gal/min.
How to Convert Gallons per minute to Imperial Gallons per Minute
Converting gallons per minute to imperial gallons per minute takes one multiplication using the fixed factor. Here is the process with 11 gal/min as a worked example.
- Write the conversion factor. One gallon per minute equals a fixed number of imperial gallons per minute:
- Set up the multiplication. Multiply your flow value by that factor:
- Cancel the units. The gal/min units cancel, leaving the result in imp-gal/min:
- State the result. Complete the arithmetic:
So 11 gal/min = imp-gal/min.
Gallons per minute to Imperial Gallons per Minute conversion table
| Gallons per minute (gal/min) | Imperial Gallons per Minute (imp-gal/min) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 0.8326742 |
| 2 | 1.665348 |
| 3 | 2.498023 |
| 4 | 3.330697 |
| 5 | 4.163371 |
| 6 | 4.996045 |
| 7 | 5.828719 |
| 8 | 6.661393 |
| 9 | 7.494068 |
| 10 | 8.326742 |
| 15 | 12.49011 |
| 20 | 16.65348 |
| 25 | 20.81685 |
| 30 | 24.98023 |
| 40 | 33.30697 |
| 50 | 41.63371 |
| 60 | 49.96045 |
| 70 | 58.28719 |
| 80 | 66.61393 |
| 90 | 74.94068 |
| 100 | 83.26742 |
| 150 | 124.9011 |
| 200 | 166.5348 |
| 250 | 208.1685 |
| 300 | 249.8023 |
| 400 | 333.0697 |
| 500 | 416.3371 |
| 600 | 499.6045 |
| 700 | 582.8719 |
| 800 | 666.1393 |
| 900 | 749.4068 |
| 1000 | 832.6742 |
| 2000 | 1665.348 |
| 3000 | 2498.023 |
| 4000 | 3330.697 |
| 5000 | 4163.371 |
| 10000 | 8326.742 |
| 25000 | 20816.85 |
| 50000 | 41633.71 |
| 100000 | 83267.42 |
| 250000 | 208168.5 |
| 500000 | 416337.1 |
| 1000000 | 832674.2 |
What is Gallons Per Minute (GPM)?
Gallons per minute (GPM) is a unit of measurement that expresses the volume of a liquid that flows past a specific point in one minute. It's commonly used to quantify the rate of fluid transfer or consumption.
Understanding Gallons
A gallon is a unit of volume in the United States customary and imperial systems of measurement. There are different types of gallons, but the U.S. liquid gallon is most relevant here:
- 1 U.S. liquid gallon = 231 cubic inches
- 1 U.S. liquid gallon ≈ 3.785 liters
Therefore, 1 GPM is equivalent to 3.785 liters per minute.
Calculating GPM
The flow rate (Q) in GPM can be calculated using different methods, depending on the available information. Here are a couple of common scenarios:
-
From Volume and Time:
If you know the volume (V) of liquid that flows in a specific time (t), you can calculate GPM using the following formula:
Where:
- Q = Flow rate in gallons per minute (GPM)
- V = Volume in gallons
- t = Time in minutes
-
From Velocity and Area:
If you know the average velocity (v) of the liquid flow and the cross-sectional area (A) of the pipe or channel, you can calculate GPM using the following formula:
Where:
- Q = Flow rate (convert to GPM using appropriate conversion factors)
- v = Average velocity (e.g., feet per second)
- A = Cross-sectional area (e.g., square feet)
Conversion Factors: Remember to use appropriate conversion factors to ensure your final answer is in GPM.
Real-World Examples of GPM
- Water Usage in Homes: Showerheads and faucets often have flow rates specified in GPM. For example, a low-flow showerhead might have a flow rate of 2.5 GPM or less.
- Pumps: Pumps used in various applications (e.g., sump pumps, water pumps for irrigation) are often rated by their GPM capacity. A sump pump might be rated to pump 15 GPM or more.
- Industrial Processes: In manufacturing and chemical processing, GPM is crucial for controlling the flow of liquids in pipelines, reactors, and other equipment. Specific processes might require flow rates ranging from a few GPM to hundreds or even thousands of GPM.
- HVAC Systems: Chillers and cooling towers in HVAC systems use GPM to measure the flow rate of coolant water.
- Irrigation: Sprinkler systems are often rated in GPM to ensure sufficient water distribution for plant growth.
Interesting Facts and Connections
- Plumbing Codes: Plumbing codes often specify maximum allowable flow rates for fixtures (e.g., faucets, showerheads) in order to conserve water.
- Water Conservation: Reducing GPM is a key strategy for water conservation efforts in residential, commercial, and industrial settings.
- Hydraulic Engineering: GPM is a fundamental unit in hydraulic engineering for designing and analyzing fluid flow systems.
Additional Resources
For more information on flow rate and related concepts, refer to the following resources:
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 gallons per minute to imperial gallons per minute?
Multiply the flow in gal/min by the conversion factor 0.8326741846744. In symbols, . This single-step multiplication works for any value.
How many imperial gallons per minute are in 1 gallon per minute?
There are imperial gallons per minute in one gallon per minute. Equivalently, one imperial gallon per minute equals gallons per minute.
How do I convert 11 gal/min to imp-gal/min?
Multiply: imp-gal/min. So 11 gal/min is about imp-gal/min.
Where is the gallons per minute to imperial gallons per minute conversion used in practice?
It shows up whenever a pump, meter, or system rates flow in one unit but a spec sheet, code, or supplier uses the other — for example matching an irrigation controller, a fuel-transfer pump, or an HVAC water loop to its rated imp-gal/min figure.
Why do imperial and US gallon flow rates differ?
The imperial (UK) gallon is 4.54609 litres while the US gallon is 3.785411784 litres, so an imperial gallon is roughly 20% larger. That is exactly why converting gallons per minute to imperial gallons per minute is not 1:1 — the factor 0.8326741846744 carries that size difference.