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Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs (cwt to slug) Converter

1 cwt = 3.4811 slug

1 Hundredweight (UK) equals 3.4811 Slugs (1 cwt = 3.4811 slug). Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs with formula, table, and examples.

One long hundredweight equals approximately 3.481 slugs. The long hundredweight at 112 pounds is a practical British commercial unit, while the slug at about 14.594 kilograms is the engineering mass unit in the foot-pound-second system. This conversion connects two Imperial-system units that were designed for entirely different purposes - one for trade, one for physics.

How to Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs

slug = cwt × 3.4810664042
Multiply the value in Hundredweights (UK) by 3.4810664042
  1. Take your value in Hundredweights (UK)
  2. Multiply by 3.4810664042
  3. Read the result in Slugs

Common Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs Conversions

Hundredweights (UK) (cwt) Slugs (slug) Status
0.1 cwt 0.3481 slug
0.25 cwt 0.8703 slug
0.5 cwt 1.7405 slug
1 cwt 3.4811 slug
2 cwt 6.9621 slug
5 cwt 17.4053 slug
10 cwt 34.8107 slug
20 cwt 69.6213 slug
50 cwt 174.0533 slug
100 cwt 348.1066 slug
200 cwt 696.2133 slug
500 cwt 1,740.5332 slug

Good to Know About Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs Conversion

The slug and the hundredweight were both products of English-speaking engineering and commerce, but they never occupied the same professional world. The hundredweight was the language of merchants, farmers, and dockers - practical people who weighed things to trade them. The slug was the language of physicists and engineers - theoretical people who needed mass (not weight) for force calculations. The two units reflect the split between practical commerce and theoretical science that characterized English-speaking technical culture from the Industrial Revolution onward.

Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs: What You Need to Know

This conversion has limited practical application outside engineering textbook problems. The slug exists primarily in American aerospace and mechanical engineering calculations, while the hundredweight belongs to British commodity trading. A scenario requiring both units simultaneously would be extremely unusual - perhaps calculating the aerodynamic forces on a cargo plane loaded with hundredweight crates.

What is a Hundredweight (UK)? cwt

A UK hundredweight (long hundredweight) is exactly 112 pounds or 50.80234544 kilograms. Used in British agriculture and traditional commerce.

Imperial UK agriculture traditional British commerce
Learn more about Hundredweight (UK) →

What is a Slug? slug

A slug is a unit of mass in the imperial system used in physics and engineering. It equals approximately 14.593903 kilograms, derived from the pound-force, standard gravity, and the foot.

Imperial physics engineering aerospace
Learn more about Slug →

Going the other way? Use our Slugs to Hundredweights (UK) converter.

Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs FAQ

  • Approximately 3.481 slugs. One long hundredweight is about 50.802 kilograms, and one slug is about 14.594 kilograms, so 50.802 divided by 14.594 gives approximately 3.481.

  • Almost nobody would in practice. The only conceivable scenario is an engineering problem involving cargo weight expressed in hundredweights that requires force or acceleration calculations in the FPS system. Modern engineering typically converts both to kilograms and uses SI units, bypassing slugs entirely.

  • The hundredweight is a unit of commercial weight - it tells you how heavy a sack of goods is. The slug is a unit of inertial mass - it tells you how much force is needed to accelerate an object. Under standard gravity, weight and mass are proportional, so the conversion is straightforward. But conceptually, they answer different questions about the same physical object.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Hundredweights (UK) to Slugs

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • The question is backwards - slugs are a unit of mass, not speed. But the confusion is understandable, because slugs sound like they should describe something slow. A hundredweight (3.481 slugs) thrown by a catapult might reach 30 meters per second. The slug measurement tells you how much force was needed, not how fast it goes.

  • It is a top contender. A unit of mass named after a slow, slimy garden creature and used exclusively by aerospace engineers is peak measurement irony. At least the hundredweight tells you roughly what it is (a weight measured in hundreds). The slug tells you nothing except that the physicist who named it had a sense of humor.

  • A garden slug weighs about 10 grams and can carry roughly its own body weight. Three and a half engineering slugs equals about 50.8 kilograms or 50,800 grams. A garden slug carrying 3.481 slugs of mass would be supporting roughly 5,080 times its own weight. Even the most ambitious garden slug would decline this opportunity.