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Convert Grams per second to Pounds per minute

Instantly convert Grams per second (g/s) to Pounds per minute (lb/min) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: g/s to lb/minmultiply by 0.132277

Reference Table

Grams per second (g/s)Pounds per minute (lb/min)
10.132277
50.661387
101.32277
253.30694
506.61387
10013.2277

How to Convert Grams per second to Pounds per minute

Formula

To convert Grams per second (g/s) to Pounds per minute (lb/min): multiply by 0.132277

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Grams per second (g/s).
  2. Multiply by 0.132277 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Pounds per minute (lb/min).

Conversion Factor

1 g/s = 0.132277 lb/min

Reverse Factor

1 lb/min = 7.55987 g/s

Worked Example

Convert 25 Grams per second to Pounds per minute: 25 g/s = 3.30694 lb/min

About Gram per second (g/s)

A metric mass-flow unit equal to exactly 10⁻³ kg/s. g/s is the working unit for small-scale and instrumentation-grade mass-flow measurement applications: automotive Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor output (typical idle 2-4 g/s, cruise 10-30 g/s, wide-open-throttle on a 3.5 L V6 ~100-180 g/s), engine-management data-logging (HP Tuners, EFILive, Cobb AccessPort, OpenECU all report MAF in g/s for North American vehicles), automotive dyno-tuning and powertrain calibration software, OBD-II Mode 01 PID 0x10 (MAF rate) which is defined as g/s per SAE J1979 and ISO 15031-5, laboratory fuel-injector flow-bench measurement using SAE J1832 procedures, medical respiratory-gas delivery (HFNC high-flow nasal cannula 60-120 g/s of warmed/humidified air-O₂ mix per AARC Clinical Practice Guidelines), small-scale chemical-process dosing (Bronkhorst / Sensirion / Honeywell mass-flow controllers commonly used in semiconductor fabs and pharmaceutical manufacturing), and analytical-instrument carrier-gas flows. Convert g/s to kg/s by dividing by 1,000; to lb/min by multiplying by 0.1323; to kg/hr by multiplying by 3.6.

About Pound per minute (lb/min)

An imperial mass-flow unit equal to exactly 1/60 of lb/s ≈ 7.5599 × 10⁻³ kg/s. lb/min is used for medium-timescale US engineering applications where the per-second timebase would give awkwardly small decimals and the per-hour timebase too-large numbers. Common uses: HVAC humidification (commercial steam-injection humidifiers rated 5-100 lb/min per ASHRAE Handbook), compressed-air-system purge and surge calculations, pneumatic-conveying mass-handling rates per CEMA standards (food-processing line dispensing of flour, sugar, salt, dried fruit; pharmaceutical excipient transfer per ISPE Baseline Guide for solid-dosage manufacturing), powder-coating gun flow rates (typical 1-5 lb/min), legacy reciprocating internal-combustion-engine air-flow specifications (lb/min was the standard automotive MAF unit before the industry transitioned to g/s in the early 2000s on OBD-II Mode 01 PID 0x10 per SAE J1979), and packaging-line throughput specifications for bulk consumer products. Convert lb/min to kg/s by multiplying by 7.5599 × 10⁻³; to g/s by multiplying by 7.5599; to lb/hr by multiplying by 60; to lb/s by dividing by 60.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Gram per second equals 0.132277 Pounds per minute
  • 1 Pound per minute equals 7.55987 Grams per second
  • Gram per second is a unit of mass flow rate
  • Pound per minute is a unit of mass flow rate
  • This conversion is commonly used in chemical processing, fuel systems, and environmental monitoring
  • The Gram per second belongs to the metric system
  • The Pound per minute belongs to the imperial system

Common Gram per second to Pound per minute Conversions

Grams per second (g/s)Pounds per minute (lb/min)
0.010.00132277
0.10.0132277
0.250.0330694
0.50.0661387
10.132277
20.264555
30.396832
50.661387
101.32277
151.98416
202.64555
253.30694
506.61387
759.92081
10013.2277
25033.0694
50066.1387
1000132.277
5000661.387
100001322.77

Understanding Grams per second

The Gram per second (symbol: g/s) is a unit of mass flow rate. A metric mass-flow unit equal to exactly 10⁻³ kg/s. g/s is the working unit for small-scale and instrumentation-grade mass-flow measurement applications: automotive Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor output (typical idle 2-4 g/s, cruise 10-30 g/s, wide-open-throttle on a 3.5 L V6 ~100-180 g/s), engine-management data-logging (HP Tuners, EFILive, Cobb AccessPort, OpenECU all report MAF in g/s for North American vehicles), automotive dyno-tuning and powertrain calibration software, OBD-II Mode 01 PID 0x10 (MAF rate) which is defined as g/s per SAE J1979 and ISO 15031-5, laboratory fuel-injector flow-bench measurement using SAE J1832 procedures, medical respiratory-gas delivery (HFNC high-flow nasal cannula 60-120 g/s of warmed/humidified air-O₂ mix per AARC Clinical Practice Guidelines), small-scale chemical-process dosing (Bronkhorst / Sensirion / Honeywell mass-flow controllers commonly used in semiconductor fabs and pharmaceutical manufacturing), and analytical-instrument carrier-gas flows. Convert g/s to kg/s by dividing by 1,000; to lb/min by multiplying by 0.1323; to kg/hr by multiplying by 3.6.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Grams per second are commonly used in chemical processing, fuel systems, and environmental monitoring.

Understanding Pounds per minute

The Pound per minute (symbol: lb/min) is a unit of mass flow rate. An imperial mass-flow unit equal to exactly 1/60 of lb/s ≈ 7.5599 × 10⁻³ kg/s. lb/min is used for medium-timescale US engineering applications where the per-second timebase would give awkwardly small decimals and the per-hour timebase too-large numbers. Common uses: HVAC humidification (commercial steam-injection humidifiers rated 5-100 lb/min per ASHRAE Handbook), compressed-air-system purge and surge calculations, pneumatic-conveying mass-handling rates per CEMA standards (food-processing line dispensing of flour, sugar, salt, dried fruit; pharmaceutical excipient transfer per ISPE Baseline Guide for solid-dosage manufacturing), powder-coating gun flow rates (typical 1-5 lb/min), legacy reciprocating internal-combustion-engine air-flow specifications (lb/min was the standard automotive MAF unit before the industry transitioned to g/s in the early 2000s on OBD-II Mode 01 PID 0x10 per SAE J1979), and packaging-line throughput specifications for bulk consumer products. Convert lb/min to kg/s by multiplying by 7.5599 × 10⁻³; to g/s by multiplying by 7.5599; to lb/hr by multiplying by 60; to lb/s by dividing by 60.

It belongs to the imperial measurement system.

Pounds per minute are commonly used in chemical processing, fuel systems, and environmental monitoring.

Why Convert Grams per second to Pounds per minute?

Converting between Grams per second and Pounds per minute is a frequent requirement for engineers, scientists, and students working with mass flow rate values. Different industries and regions favour different unit systems, so having a dependable conversion tool saves time and prevents errors in technical calculations. Whether you are verifying a specification sheet, cross-checking simulation results, or preparing a report for an international audience, accurate mass flow rate conversion is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Grams per second to Pounds per minute?

A metric mass-flow unit equal to exactly 10⁻³ kg/s. To convert Grams per second to Pounds per minute, multiply by 0.132277. For example, 25 g/s equals 3.30694 lb/min.

How many Pounds per minute are in 1 Gram per second?

There are 0.132277 Pounds per minute in 1 Gram per second.

How many Grams per second are in 1 Pound per minute?

There are 7.55987 Grams per second in 1 Pound per minute.

What is the formula for Gram per second to Pound per minute conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 0.132277. This means 1 g/s = 0.132277 lb/min.

Is a Gram per second bigger than a Pound per minute?

Yes. One Gram per second is larger than one Pound per minute because 1 g/s equals 0.132277 lb/min, which is less than 1.

When do you need to convert between Grams per second and Pounds per minute?

An imperial mass-flow unit equal to exactly 1/60 of lb/s ≈ 7. Gram per second and Pound per minute are both mass flow units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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