Convert Yard per Minute to Beaufort Scale (yd/min → Bft)
Yards per minute is used in American textile manufacturing and traditional industrial production-line specifications.
Yard per Minute to Beaufort Scale Conversion Table
10 common values| Yard per Minute | Beaufort Scale |
|---|---|
| 1 yd/min | 0.01524 Bft |
| 5 yd/min | 0.0762 Bft |
| 10 yd/min | 0.1524 Bft |
| 25 yd/min | 0.381 Bft |
| 50 yd/min | 0.762 Bft |
| 100 yd/min | 1.524 Bft |
| 150 yd/min | 2.286 Bft |
| 200 yd/min | 3.048 Bft |
| 300 yd/min | 4.572 Bft |
| 500 yd/min | 7.62 Bft |
How to Convert Yard per Minute to Beaufort Scale Manually
Step by StepConverting yards per minute to Beaufort is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in yards per minuteStart with the number of yards per minute (yd/min) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.01524The conversion factor from yd/min to Bft is 0.01524. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in BeaufortThe result is your value in Beaufort (Bft).
Formula
Multiply the value in yards per minute by 0.01524. For the reverse direction, multiply by 65.616798.
Bft = (m/s ÷ 0.836)^(1/1.5)m/s = 0.836 × Bft^1.5Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 yd/min = 0.01524 m/s = 0.0549 km/h.
- 60 yd/min = 1 yd/s (yards per second).
- Rarely encountered outside manufacturing.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing yd/min with mph — 1 mph = ~29 yd/min.
- Using yd/min in metric settings.
- Mixing speed and position units in process-control contexts.
About Yard per Minute and Beaufort Scale
What is the Yard per Minute?
Yards per minute is used in textile manufacturing, conveyor belt speeds, and certain American industrial settings. Fabric production lines rate output in yards per minute, and industrial conveyor systems often quote speeds in ypm for compatibility with customary American manufacturing measurements. The unit relates to feet per minute (3 fpm = 1 ypm), inches per minute (36 ipm = 1 ypm), miles per hour (1 ypm ≈ 0.0341 mph), and meters per minute (1 ypm ≈ 0.914 m/min). Outside textile and conveyor contexts, ypm is rare in modern industrial use, with most engineering disciplines preferring fpm or m/s.
- Textile loom and weaving speeds
- Conveyor-belt systems
- Some US industrial processes
Industrial loom: 300–1000 yd/min. Conveyor-belt throughput: varies widely.
What is the Beaufort Scale?
The Beaufort scale is an empirical wind-force scale ranging from 0 (calm) to 12 (hurricane), developed in 1805 by British Royal Navy Admiral Francis Beaufort. Originally designed for ships at sea, the scale was based on observed effects: 'How much sail can my ship safely carry?' Modern versions describe both observed effects on land and sea and corresponding wind-speed ranges. Force 0 is dead calm (under 1 km/h), Force 6 is 'strong breeze' (39–49 km/h, large branches in motion), Force 10 is a 'whole storm' (89–102 km/h), and Force 12 is hurricane (over 118 km/h). The conversion to numeric speeds follows v = 0.836 × Bft^1.5 m/s. Sailors, meteorologists, and shipping forecasts still use the Beaufort scale because its descriptive nature is intuitive: 'Force 8 gale' immediately conveys conditions to anyone familiar with the scale.
- Marine weather forecasts
- Sailing and offshore navigation
- Historical weather records
Force 5 (fresh breeze): 17–21 knots, white-caps form. Force 8 (gale): 34–40 knots. Force 12: 64+ knots.