Bolt to Toise Conversion Calculator: Free Online Tool
Convert bolts to toise with our free online length converter.
Bolt to Toise Calculator
How to Use the Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Bolt).
- The converted value in Toise will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Bolt to Toise
Converting Bolt to Toise involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Bolt = 15.63879 toise
Example Calculation:
Convert 10 bolts: 10 × 15.63879 = 156.3879 toise
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
What is a Bolt and a Toise?
A Bolt is a commercial unit of length primarily used for measuring rolls of cloth or fabric. Unlike standardized units like the meter or yard, the length of a bolt is not fixed and can vary significantly depending on the type of material, the manufacturer, the country of origin, and trade customs.
Common lengths often associated with a bolt include:
- 40 yards (approximately 36.58 meters) - Frequently cited, especially for cottons and silks in the US.
- 100 yards (approximately 91.44 meters) - Often used for heavier fabrics like canvas.
- Other lengths such as 30, 50, 60, or 120 yards may also be encountered.
The bolt represents a quantity convenient for wholesale trade, manufacturing, and inventory management rather than a precise scientific measurement.
The Toise is an historical French unit of length, used extensively before the adoption of the metric system. It was legally defined as 6 pieds du roi (French royal feet).
Based on the standard established for the pied du roi, the Toise equates to:
- Exactly 1.94903631 meters (m) (based on the 1799 definition of the meter relative to the standard Toise bar)
- Approximately 6.395 English feet (ft)
- Approximately 76.73 English inches (in)
The Toise was further subdivided:
- 1 Toise = 6 Pieds (French feet)
- 1 Toise = 72 Pouces (French inches)
- 1 Toise = 864 Lignes (French lines)
Note: The Bolt is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Toise belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Bolt and Toise
The concept of the bolt emerged from the practical needs of the textile industry. As cloth production scaled up, manufacturers and merchants needed a standardized way to handle, store, and trade large quantities of fabric. Winding cloth onto a roll or board (the "bolt") provided a convenient package.
The length associated with a bolt likely developed through trade customs specific to different types of fabric and regions. There was never a universal legal standard defining its length, leading to the wide variations seen historically and currently. While retail sales shifted towards measurement by the yard or meter, the bolt remained a useful unit in wholesale and industrial contexts. Even with the global adoption of the metric system, the term "bolt" persists in the textile trade as a reference to a full roll of fabric, though the exact length is usually specified separately in yards or meters.
The Toise was a fundamental unit of length in France for centuries, used in various fields from the Middle Ages through the Ancien Régime and into the early post-revolutionary period. Its name derives from the Latin tensa, meaning "stretched (arms)", suggesting an origin related to fathom.
Standardization was crucial. The primary standard became the Toise du Châtelet, an iron bar embedded in the wall of the Grand Châtelet fortress in Paris. In 1668, this standard was physically copied by Jean Picard and used for geodetic surveys. Later, a copy known as the Toise du Pérou (or Toise de l'Académie) became the official reference standard for French length measurements. This specific bar was physically used in the famous French Geodesic Missions to Peru (1735–1744) and Lapland (1736–1737), which aimed to measure the length of a degree of latitude near the equator and the Arctic Circle, respectively.
These measurements, based on the Toise, were instrumental in determining the shape of the Earth and ultimately provided the basis for the definition of the meter. The meter was initially defined in the 1790s as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the Equator along the meridian passing through Paris, a distance calculated from the geodetic surveys performed using the Toise standard.
The Toise was officially replaced by the meter following the French Revolution and the establishment of the metric system in France, formally adopted in 1799.
Common Uses for bolts and toise
Explore the typical applications for both Bolt (imperial/US) and Toise (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for bolts
The bolt is almost exclusively used within the textile industry:
- Wholesale Trade: Fabric manufacturers sell cloth to distributors or large buyers in bolts.
- Manufacturing: Clothing and upholstery manufacturers purchase fabric by the bolt for production runs.
- Inventory Management: Textile mills, warehouses, and large retailers manage stock using bolts as units.
- Industrial Fabrics: Suppliers of canvas, vinyl, and other industrial textiles often sell material by the bolt.
It is generally not used for retail sales to consumers, where fabric is typically measured and cut to specific lengths (yards or meters) from the bolt.
Common Uses for toise
The Toise is now obsolete but was historically essential for:
- Land Surveying: Measuring land areas, property boundaries, and distances for cartography.
- Architecture and Civil Engineering: Designing and constructing buildings, bridges, canals, roads, and fortifications (notably by Vauban). Dimensions of major historical French structures were often specified in Toise.
- Military Engineering: Laying out fortifications, measuring artillery ranges.
- Geodesy and Scientific Measurement: Serving as the standard unit for precise scientific measurements, particularly in astronomy and the crucial 18th-century geodetic surveys that measured the Earth.
- Craftsmanship: Used in various trades requiring length measurements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions About Bolt (bolt)
How long is a bolt of cloth?
There is no single standard length. It depends heavily on the fabric type and manufacturer. Common lengths include:
- 40 yards (~36.58 m)
- 100 yards (~91.44 m)
- Other lengths like 30, 50, 60, or 120 yards are also possible. Always check the specific product information for the actual length of a particular bolt.
How many yards are in a bolt?
Commonly 40 yards or 100 yards, but this is highly variable.
How many meters are in a bolt?
Based on common yard lengths:
- A 40-yard bolt is approximately 36.58 meters.
- A 100-yard bolt is approximately 91.44 meters.
Is the bolt a standardized unit?
No, it is not a standardized unit of length like the yard or meter. It's a commercial trade unit whose length varies.
Is the bolt still used today?
Yes, the term "bolt" is still widely used in the wholesale textile industry and manufacturing contexts to refer to a full roll of fabric, although the precise length is usually specified in yards or meters.
Is this related to the fastener "bolt"?
No, the bolt unit for cloth is completely unrelated to the metal fastener known as a bolt. They share the same name but have entirely different meanings and origins.
About Toise (toise)
How long is a Toise?
The standard French Toise is defined as 6 pieds du roi (French royal feet). This corresponds to:
- Exactly 1.94903631 meters
- Approximately 6.395 English feet
How does the Toise compare to a Meter?
- 1 Toise ≈ 1.949 meters
- 1 Meter ≈ 0.513 Toise The Toise was the historical standard upon which the original definition of the meter was based through geodetic surveys.
What were the subdivisions of the Toise?
The Toise was divided based on the French foot (pied du roi):
- 1 Toise = 6 Pieds
- 1 Pied = 12 Pouces (inches)
- 1 Pouce = 12 Lignes (lines) Therefore, 1 Toise = 72 pouces = 864 lignes.
Is the Toise an SI unit?
No, the Toise is not an SI unit. It is a traditional unit from the pre-metric French system (Mesures usuelles). The SI base unit for length is the meter (m).
Is the Toise still used today?
No, the Toise is obsolete and not used in modern measurements. It was legally replaced by the meter in France and elsewhere. Its significance today is purely historical, particularly in the context of historical architecture, engineering, surveying, and the scientific history leading to the metric system.
Conversion Table: Bolt to Toise
Bolt (bolt) | Toise (toise) |
---|---|
1 | 15.639 |
5 | 78.194 |
10 | 156.388 |
25 | 390.97 |
50 | 781.94 |
100 | 1,563.879 |
500 | 7,819.395 |
1,000 | 15,638.789 |
All Length Conversions
Other Units from Length
- Meter (m)
- Kilometer (km)
- Hectometer (hm)
- Decimeter (dm)
- Centimeter (cm)
- Millimeter (mm)
- Inch (in)
- Foot (ft)
- Yard (yd)
- Mile (mi)
- Nautical Mile (NM)
- Micrometer (μm)
- Nanometer (nm)
- Light Year (ly)
- Astronomical Unit (AU)
- Parsec (pc)
- Angstrom (Å)
- Point (Typography) (pt)
- Mil/Thou (mil)
- Fathom (fath)
- Furlong (fur)
- Link (Gunter's) (li)
- Pace (pace)
- Span (span)
- Digit (digit)
- Cable Length (cb)
- Ell (ell)
- Finger (finger)
- Roman Mile (m.p.)
- Stadion (stadion)
- Chi (Chinese) (chi)
- Shaku (Japanese) (shaku)
- Li (Chinese) (li)
- Rope (rope)
- Smoot (smoot)
- Sajene (sajene)
- Ken (ken)
- Wa (wa)
- Vara (vara)
- Aln (aln)
- Cubit (Royal/Egyptian) (cubit)
- Versta (versta)
- Arpent (arpent)
- Ri (Japanese) (ri)
- Klafter (klafter)
- Yojana (yojana)
- Skein (skein)