Convert Centimeter per Second to Inch per Minute (cm/s → in/min)
Centimeters per second measures slow phenomena like ocean currents, biological growth, and geological sedimentation.
Centimeter per Second to Inch per Minute Conversion Table
10 common values| Centimeter per Second | Inch per Minute |
|---|---|
| 1 cm/s | 23.640662 in/min |
| 5 cm/s | 118.20331 in/min |
| 10 cm/s | 236.40662 in/min |
| 25 cm/s | 591.01655 in/min |
| 50 cm/s | 1,182.0331 in/min |
| 100 cm/s | 2,364.0662 in/min |
| 150 cm/s | 3,546.0993 in/min |
| 200 cm/s | 4,728.1324 in/min |
| 300 cm/s | 7,092.1986 in/min |
| 500 cm/s | 11,820.331 in/min |
How to Convert Centimeter per Second to Inch per Minute Manually
Step by StepConverting centimeters per second to inches per minute is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in centimeters per secondStart with the number of centimeters per second (cm/s) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 23.640662The conversion factor from cm/s to in/min is 23.640662. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in inches per minuteThe result is your value in inches per minute (in/min).
Formula
Multiply the value in centimeters per second by 23.640662. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.0423.
in/min = cm/s × 23.640662cm/s = in/min × 0.0423Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 cm/s = 0.01 m/s = 0.036 km/h.
- Useful when m/s or km/h give awkward small numbers.
- Use consistent metric prefixes to avoid confusion.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Treating cm/s as fast speeds.
- Mixing cm/s with m/s in the same dataset without labels.
- Converting improperly for wind or car speeds — wrong scale.
About Centimeter per Second and Inch per Minute
What is the Centimeter per Second?
Centimeters per second is the natural unit for slow, sustained motions: ocean currents, biological growth rates, sedimentation in geology, and laboratory fluid dynamics. The Gulf Stream flows at about 90–250 cm/s, glaciers creep at 1–10 cm/s on average, and fingernails grow at roughly 0.0035 cm/s. Centimeters per second appears in oceanography, hydrology, soil science, and biological motion studies. It relates to m/s (100 cm/s = 1 m/s), km/h (1 cm/s = 0.036 km/h), and mph (1 cm/s ≈ 0.0224 mph). The CGS (centimeter-gram-second) unit system used cm/s as its base speed, which influenced older physics literature, particularly in astrophysics and fluid mechanics.
- Ocean current speeds
- Biological motion (cells, small organisms)
- Laboratory fluid flow rates
Gulf Stream: 100–200 cm/s. Amoeba: 1 mm/s = 0.1 cm/s. Sediment settling: 0.01–1 cm/s.
What is the Inch per Minute?
Inches per minute is the American standard feed-rate unit for CNC machining, 3D printing, milling machines, and precision manufacturing. Machinists program tool feed rates in IPM (inches per minute) — typical values range from 5 to 100 IPM depending on material and tool. American machine controllers (Fanuc, Haas, Mazak) default to inches per minute when set to imperial mode. 3D printer feed rates are also commonly specified in IPM in US-built machines. The unit relates to inches per second (60 ipm = 1 ips), mm per minute (1 ipm = 25.4 mm/min — the metric machinist equivalent), and feet per minute (12 ipm = 1 fpm). Manufacturing CAM (computer-aided manufacturing) software allows switching between IPM and metric mm/min depending on machine controller setup.
- CNC milling and turning feed rates
- 3D printer head movement
- Some US industrial flow specifications
CNC aluminum cut: 20–60 in/min. 3D printer travel: 60–200 in/min. Plant growth: fractions of in/min × time.