bpelec
Electrical
- Jul 12, 2005
- 54
I feel as though this may have been explained before, but my searching was not successful. My apologies if I have missed the answer...
I am an electrical engineer struggling with the units of inertia.
I have a specification that states that the inertial load is 0.65 lb-in-sec^2. I can't think of inertia in those units, and so I want to convert to kg-m^2.
I have found several online calculators that can perform this conversion. Here are two:
So, all seems good, but I can't work out how on earth the conversion is happening without any additional information given the change in units.
My question is this: what is the theory behind converting an inertia from lb-in-sec^2 to kg-m^2?
Many thanks,
BPELEC.
I am an electrical engineer struggling with the units of inertia.
I have a specification that states that the inertial load is 0.65 lb-in-sec^2. I can't think of inertia in those units, and so I want to convert to kg-m^2.
I have found several online calculators that can perform this conversion. Here are two:
So, all seems good, but I can't work out how on earth the conversion is happening without any additional information given the change in units.
My question is this: what is the theory behind converting an inertia from lb-in-sec^2 to kg-m^2?
Many thanks,
BPELEC.