Kilograms (Kg) and Kilograms-Force (Kgf)

N_Molson

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It may seem very simple but I want to be absolutely certain of this :

Can I say that a model rocket with a mass of 1 kilogram and a thrust of 1 kilogram-force has a Thrust/Weight ratio of 1:1 ?

(at liftoff (T+0), practically the mass will lower as the fuel is burned).
 
Is there a 'standard' gravitational acceleration that's used in this weird unit to convert it from the correct unit for force: Newton?
 
Yes, the usual 9.81.
On Earth (meaning surface gravitational acceleration of 9.81 m/s^2) an object which has a mass of 1 kg has a weight of 9.81 N, or 1 kgf.

The kilogram-force (kgf) much like the pound-force only (appears to) make sense when used with the standard gravitational acceleration we have on Earth: if they were defined on the Moon, for example, they would be quite a bit different.
 
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There is of course no such unit as "kilograms force". A kilogram is a unit of mass. A Newton is a measure of force. It should not be possible to confuse the two, which is a major advantage of SI. Unlike, say, some other systems, where the "multiply by 32.2 error" is all too common. And it would be worse in SI, since it looks a lot like a simple decimal shift.
 
Yes, the usual 9.81.
On Earth (meaning surface gravitational acceleration of 9.81 m/s^2) an object which has a mass of 1 kg has a weight of 9.81 N, or 1 kgf.

The kilogram-force (kgf) much like the pound-force only (appears to) make sense when used with the standard gravitational acceleration we have on Earth: if they were defined on the Moon, for example, they would be quite a bit different.

How 'standard' is 9.81 m/s^2? If I 'ask' my TI-nspire I get 9.0665 m/s^2. I think that one doesn't include the rotation of the Earth.

IMHO those kind of units produce no advantage what so ever, unless you are trying to confuse somebody.
 
How 'standard' is 9.81 m/s^2? If I 'ask' my TI-nspire I get 9.0665 m/s^2. I think that one doesn't include the rotation of the Earth.

IMHO those kind of units produce no advantage what so ever, unless you are trying to confuse somebody.

Hm. I assumed it was standard since that is what I've always seen referenced to as gravitational acceleration at sea level.
Here ya go: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_acceleration#Gravity_model_For_Earth

But you're right, and these units are doing a fine job of confusing us. :)
 
Well, in fact I was searching for the way to calculate the Thrust/Weight* ratio, and I found on a site in french that you had to divide thrust in kilograms-force by weight in kilogram.

*The french translation of thrust is "poussée", weight is "poids" and mass is... "masse", so at least I'm sure I'm translating correctly. Thrust/Weight ratio is "Rapport Poids/Poussée" (notice the nasty inversion between thrust and weight, which doesn't help !!).

So how should we do it the SI way ? Convert weight (in kg) into mass (in N) ? Then dividing by the thrust (also in N ?). I'm very confused there. :confused:
 
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So how should we do it the SI way ? Convert weight (in kg) into mass (in N) ? Then dividing by the thrust (also in N ?). I'm very confused there. :confused:

I would do it that way, but swap the 'names'.

Weight: A force in N
Mass: Mass in kg

So that would be: Convert mass (kg) into weight (N), and then divide by thrust (N).
 
I prefer thrust to weight ratios calculated in N/kg which gives me acceleration in m/s2
 
There is of course no such unit as "kilograms force". A kilogram is a unit of mass. A Newton is a measure of force. It should not be possible to confuse the two, which is a major advantage of SI. Unlike, say, some other systems, where the "multiply by 32.2 error" is all too common. And it would be worse in SI, since it looks a lot like a simple decimal shift.

As far as I recall there is an unit of force 1 kp (kiloponds) = 9.80665 N. Not very common these days.
 
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