Convert Between Units of Acceleration
This Acceleration conversion tool helps engineers, scientists, and students convert between common and specialty Acceleration units. It's designed for quick checks, documentation cleanup, and day-to-day engineering calculations.
About Acceleration Conversions
Helpful context and notes for converting Acceleration units.
This Acceleration conversion tool helps engineers, scientists, and students convert between common and specialty Acceleration units. It's designed for quick checks, documentation cleanup, and day-to-day engineering calculations.
Acceleration conversions are used in motion analysis, vibration, and equipment performance, including gravity-based values reported in m/s², ft/s², or “g”.
Kinematics values are often reused across calculations (spreadsheets, CAD notes, reports), so unit consistency matters more than it seems. If you're mixing SI and imperial sources, double-check the unit context and rounding—especially when values feed into downstream engineering formulas.
Frequently Asked Questions
Fun Fact
One carat is 200 milligrams - proof that a speck of shiny rock can cost more than your entire toolbox.
Unit Categories
Explore the types of units you can convert on this site.