Convert Inch per Minute to Kilometer per Hour (in/min → km/h)
Inches per minute is the American standard for CNC machining feed rates, 3D printer speeds, and manufacturing.
Inch per Minute to Kilometer per Hour Conversion Table
10 common values| Inch per Minute | Kilometer per Hour |
|---|---|
| 1 in/min | 0.001523 km/h |
| 5 in/min | 0.007614 km/h |
| 10 in/min | 0.015228 km/h |
| 25 in/min | 0.03807 km/h |
| 50 in/min | 0.07614 km/h |
| 100 in/min | 0.15228 km/h |
| 150 in/min | 0.22842 km/h |
| 200 in/min | 0.30456 km/h |
| 300 in/min | 0.45684 km/h |
| 500 in/min | 0.7614 km/h |
How to Convert Inch per Minute to Kilometer per Hour Manually
Step by StepConverting inches per minute to kilometers per hour is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in inches per minuteStart with the number of inches per minute (in/min) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.001523The conversion factor from in/min to km/h is 0.001523. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in kilometers per hourThe result is your value in kilometers per hour (km/h).
Formula
Multiply the value in inches per minute by 0.001523. For the reverse direction, multiply by 656.68506.
km/h = in/min × 0.001523in/min = km/h × 656.68506Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 in/min = 0.000423 m/s = 0.0254 m/min.
- CNC: lower in/min for harder materials; higher for softer.
- Always match tool speed and material — too fast breaks bits.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using mm/min and in/min interchangeably in CNC — 25.4× difference.
- Treating 100 in/min as fast — only moderate in CNC.
- Confusing feed rate with spindle RPM.
About Inch per Minute and Kilometer per Hour
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.
What is the Kilometer per Hour?
Kilometers per hour is the universal road-speed and weather wind-speed unit in 195 countries — every nation outside the United States, the United Kingdom, and a handful of Caribbean territories. Speed limits on European, Asian, Australian, African, and Latin American roads are posted in km/h: typical urban limits are 50 km/h, highway 100–130 km/h. Weather reports give wind speeds in km/h universally. The unit derives directly from the kilometer (distance) and hour (time): 1 km/h ≈ 0.278 m/s. Car speedometers in metric countries display km/h prominently, with smaller mph numbers for travel to the UK. Olympic 100-meter sprints reach 36–37 km/h, urban cyclists travel at 15–25 km/h, and commercial trains in Europe cruise at 200–300 km/h. The unit relates to mph (1 km/h ≈ 0.621 mph), m/s (3.6 km/h = 1 m/s), and the knot (1 km/h ≈ 0.540 kn).
- European and global road speed limits
- Car and motorcycle speedometers
- Weather wind speed reporting (in some regions)
German Autobahn typical speed: 130 km/h (recommended) to 180+ (no limit sections). French limit: 130 km/h. Urban: 50 km/h.