Acceleration Converter
acceleration converter
Instant conversion. Swap anytime.
Converted value
0.101972g
Calculated from your value and units at 6-decimal precision.
Commas and scientific notation are supported (for example 1,234.5 or 1e-3).
Conversion updates automatically as you change value, units, or precision.
Advanced options
Conversion details
Formula and exact relation
- 1 m/s² = 0.101971621298 g
- 1 g = 9.80665 m/s²
Formula form: g = m/s² × 0.101971621298. Display rounding follows your selected precision and does not change base conversion math.
Flow
- Enter acceleration value.
- Choose source and destination acceleration units.
- Review converted output instantly and copy if needed.
Example
Worked example: 9.80665 m/s² to g
- 1 Standard gravity is 9.80665 m/s² per g
- 2 9.80665 ÷ 9.80665 = 1
- 3 Result = 1 g
9.80665 m/s² equals exactly 1 g.
How
- Enter acceleration value.
- Choose source and destination acceleration units.
- Review converted output instantly and copy if needed.
Avoid
- Confusing speed units (m/s) with acceleration units (m/s²).
- Dropping squared time dimension during manual conversion.
- Using local gravitational variation when standard g is expected.
Checks
Best fit
Acceleration Converter is built for convert acceleration units such as m/s², g, and ft/s² for physics and engineering workflows. If Acceleration Converter does not match the input scope, compare the answer with a second method.
Input check
Match the entered values to this rule before copying the answer: a_target = a_source × (source-to-base / target-to-base).
Sanity check
For Acceleration Converter, use the worked example as a quick benchmark: 9.80665 m/s² equals exactly 1 g. If the acceleration converter answer is far away, check whether an input, unit, or mode changed.
Before copying
Review this common issue first: confusing speed units (m/s) with acceleration units (m/s²).
FAQ
Is g always exactly 9.80665?
This tool uses standard gravity constant for consistent engineering conversion.
Can I convert negative acceleration?
Yes. Negative values are allowed and represent deceleration direction.
Why include km/h/s?
Some vehicle and testing contexts report acceleration in road-speed change per second.
Switch
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