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Ounces to Hundredweights (US) (oz to cwt) Converter

1 oz = 0.0006 cwt

1 Ounce equals 0.0006 Hundredweights (US) (1 oz = 0.0006 cwt). Convert Ounces to Hundredweights (US) with formula, table, and examples.

One ounce equals exactly 0.000625 short hundredweights, or equivalently, one short hundredweight contains exactly 1,600 ounces. The short hundredweight (also called the cental) weighs 100 pounds and is the American counterpart to the British long hundredweight of 112 pounds.

How to Convert Ounces to Hundredweights (US)

cwt = oz ÷ 1,600
Divide the value in Ounces by 1,600
  1. Take your value in Ounces
  2. Divide by 1,600
  3. Read the result in Hundredweights (US)

Common Ounces to Hundredweights (US) Conversions

Ounces (oz) Hundredweights (US) (cwt) Status
1 oz 0.000625 cwt
4 oz 0.0025 cwt
8 oz 0.005 cwt
16 oz 0.01 cwt
32 oz 0.02 cwt
64 oz 0.04 cwt
100 oz 0.0625 cwt
128 oz 0.08 cwt
256 oz 0.16 cwt
500 oz 0.3125 cwt
1,000 oz 0.625 cwt
5,000 oz 3.125 cwt
10,000 oz 6.25 cwt

Good to Know About Ounces to Hundredweights (US) Conversion

The short hundredweight emerged in the United States as a simplification of the British system. Americans found 100 pounds more intuitive than 112, and the cental (as it was sometimes called) became the standard for agricultural commerce. The abbreviation 'cwt' derives from the Latin 'centum' (hundred) plus 'weight,' though it applies to both the American 100-pound and British 112-pound versions, adding one more layer of confusion to an already confusing system.

Ounces to Hundredweights (US): What You Need to Know

American farmers and commodity traders have historically used the short hundredweight for pricing grain, feed, and produce. Cattle and livestock prices at auction are sometimes quoted per hundredweight (abbreviated 'cwt'). The USDA still publishes certain crop yield data in hundredweights per acre, and feed mills in rural America continue to sell products by the hundredweight bag.

What is a Ounce? oz

An imperial and US customary unit of mass equal to approximately 28.35 grams. Commonly used in the US and UK for food and postal weight.

Imperial Us-customary food packaging (US/UK) postal weight cooking (US)
Learn more about Ounce →

What is a Hundredweight (US)? cwt

A US hundredweight (short hundredweight or cental) is exactly 100 pounds or 45.359237 kilograms. Used in US agriculture and commodities trading.

Imperial US agriculture commodities trading livestock
Learn more about Hundredweight (US) →

Going the other way? Use our Hundredweights (US) to Ounces converter.

Ounces to Hundredweights (US) FAQ

  • One short hundredweight contains exactly 1,600 ounces. This comes from 100 pounds per short hundredweight multiplied by 16 ounces per pound.

  • The short hundredweight (US) is 100 pounds, while the long hundredweight (British) is 112 pounds. The short version is the honest one, since it actually weighs a hundred pounds. The 12-pound difference between them has caused confusion in transatlantic trade for centuries.

  • The short hundredweight persists in US agriculture, particularly for quoting cattle prices, crop yields, and bulk commodity sales. The USDA reports rice production in hundredweights, and ranchers at livestock auctions still hear prices quoted per cwt.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Ounces to Hundredweights (US)

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • Because Americans looked at the British hundredweight of 112 pounds and decided that a 'hundred' should mean a hundred. This rare moment of imperial clarity gave the world a hundredweight that makes sense on its face, though it simultaneously created a world where the same term means two different things depending on which side of the Atlantic you stand.

  • Cattle prices per hundredweight apply to the animal's total live weight. A 1,200-pound steer at $1.80 per pound is $2,160 total, or $21.60 per hundredweight expressed differently. The calf in the corner does cost less, but that is because it weighs less and needs more feed before it becomes a steak.

  • It certainly competes. The hundredweight sounds like something a frontier shopkeeper would slam down on a counter while saying 'that will be three hundredweight of flour, ma'am.' Only the bushel and the cord of wood rival it for sheer frontier-commerce energy.