Fathom to Smoot Converter

Convert fathoms to smoots with our free online length converter.

Quick Answer

1 Fathom = 1.074627 smoots

Formula: Fathom × conversion factor = Smoot

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

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All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.

Last verified: February 2026Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Fathom to Smoot Calculator

How to Use the Fathom to Smoot Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Fathom).
  2. The converted value in Smoot will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
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How to Convert Fathom to Smoot: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Fathom to Smoot involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

1 Fathom = 1.074627 smoots

Example Calculation:

Convert 10 fathoms: 10 × 1.074627 = 10.74627 smoots

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 Fathom and a Smoot?

The Six-Foot Maritime Standard

The fathom is defined as exactly 6 feet in the imperial and U.S. customary measurement systems.

Precise equivalents:

  • 6 feet (by definition)
  • 2 yards (6 ft ÷ 3 ft/yd)
  • 72 inches (6 ft × 12 in/ft)
  • 1.8288 meters (exactly, using 1 ft = 0.3048 m)
  • 182.88 centimeters

Historical basis: The arm span of an average man with arms fully outstretched, measured from fingertip to fingertip.

Arm Span Origins

Old English "fæthm":

  • Primary meaning: To embrace, encircle with outstretched arms
  • Secondary meaning: The distance between fingertips when arms are extended

Practical measurement: Sailors hauling in sounding lines (weighted ropes for measuring depth) would pull hand-over-hand, with each arm span representing one fathom. This created a natural counting method:

  1. Drop weighted line overboard
  2. Haul in, counting arm spans
  3. Number of arm spans = depth in fathoms

Standardization necessity: Since arm spans varied (5.5-6.5 feet typically), maritime commerce required a fixed standard. The British settled on exactly 6 feet, matching the standardized foot of 12 inches.

Nautical Charts and Depth Contours

Fathom lines: Nautical charts show depth contours (lines connecting points of equal depth) traditionally measured in fathoms.

Common contour intervals:

  • 1, 2, 3, 5, 10 fathoms: Shallow coastal waters
  • 20, 50, 100 fathoms: Coastal navigation
  • 500, 1,000 fathoms: Deep ocean

Chart notation: Depths written as plain numbers on charts (e.g., "45") indicate 45 fathoms unless otherwise specified. Modern charts often include a note: "Depths in fathoms" or "Depths in meters."

Anchor Cable and Chain

Shackle: One "shackle" of anchor chain traditionally equals 15 fathoms (90 feet / 27.43 m) in the Royal Navy and many navies worldwide.

Anchoring depth rule: Ships typically anchor with a scope (ratio of chain length to water depth) of 5:1 to 7:1 for safety.

Example:

  • Water depth: 10 fathoms (60 feet)
  • Required chain: 50-70 fathoms (300-420 feet)
  • That's 3.3 to 4.7 shackles

The Smoot is a non-standard, humorous unit of length created as part of an MIT fraternity prank in October 1958. It is defined by the height of Oliver R. Smoot (MIT class of 1962) at the time of the prank, which was 5 feet 7 inches.

This equates to:

  • 67 inches (in)
  • 1.7018 meters (m)
  • Approximately 1.86 yards (yd)

Unlike standardized units, the Smoot is intrinsically tied to a specific individual's height at a particular moment and serves primarily as a cultural artifact and inside joke, particularly within the MIT community.

Note: The Fathom is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Smoot belongs to the imperial/US customary system.

History of the Fathom and Smoot

Ancient Maritime Practices (Pre-9th Century)

Mediterranean and Northern European sailors: Ancient mariners measured rope and depth using body-based units:

  • Cubit: Elbow to fingertip (~18 inches)
  • Pace: Two steps (~5 feet)
  • Arm span: Outstretched arms (~6 feet)

Sounding lead: A heavy weight (lead sinker) attached to a marked line, dropped overboard to measure depth. Sailors counted arm spans as they hauled the line back aboard.

Old English Documentation (9th-11th Centuries)

Earliest references: Anglo-Saxon texts use "fæthm" for measuring rope lengths and describing distances.

Beowulf (8th-11th century): The epic poem mentions "fæthmas" in describing ocean depths and ship measurements.

Viking influence: Old Norse "faðmr" (similar arm-span measurement) influenced English usage through Viking contact and trade.

Medieval Standardization (13th-15th Centuries)

Edward I (1272-1307): English law under Edward I began standardizing measurements, including the fathom at 6 feet.

Admiralty regulations: The emerging Royal Navy needed consistent rope, sail, and depth measurements for shipbuilding and navigation.

Rope making: British rope makers sold cordage by the fathom, with standard lengths for anchor cables (120 fathoms = 1 cable length in some contexts).

Age of Exploration (15th-17th Centuries)

Navigation charts: Early nautical charts (portolan charts) began incorporating depth soundings in fathoms.

Captain James Cook (1768-1779): Cook's Pacific voyages produced meticulous charts with fathom-based depth measurements. His charts became templates for British Admiralty standards.

Example - HMS Endeavour soundings: Cook's logs record depths like "15 fathoms, sandy bottom" or "No bottom at 100 fathoms" (indicating depths exceeding 600 feet).

British Admiralty Charts (19th Century)

Hydrographic Office (founded 1795): The British Admiralty Hydrographic Office systematized global nautical chart production, standardizing fathoms for depth.

Matthew Fontaine Maury (1806-1873): American oceanographer Maury collaborated with the British to create standardized depth charts using fathoms, mapping ocean currents and depths.

Cable-laying expeditions: Transatlantic telegraph cable projects (1850s-1860s) required precise fathom-based depth surveys. HMS Agamemnon and USS Niagara charted the Atlantic floor in fathoms before laying the 1858 cable.

U.S. Navy Adoption (19th-20th Centuries)

Inherited British standards: The U.S. Navy adopted British maritime practices, including fathom-based charts and anchor cable measurements.

U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey: Founded in 1807 (originally "Survey of the Coast"), it produced nautical charts in fathoms for American waters.

World War II: Submarine warfare and amphibious operations relied heavily on fathom-based depth charts. USS submarines operated in waters charted in fathoms.

Metrication Movement (20th Century-Present)

International Hydrographic Organization (IHO, founded 1921): Recommended global adoption of metric system for nautical charts.

Gradual transition:

  • 1970s-1980s: Most nations began publishing new charts in meters
  • UK Admiralty: Converted most charts to meters by the 1990s
  • U.S. NOAA: Many American charts still use fathoms, particularly for coastal waters

Mixed usage today: Modern electronic chart systems (ECDIS) allow display in either fathoms or meters, accommodating mariners accustomed to either system.

The Smoot unit originated in October 1958 during the pledge activities of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity at MIT. Pledges were tasked with measuring the length of the Harvard Bridge, which connects Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, over the Charles River.

Instead of using conventional measuring tools, the fraternity members decided to use one of their pledges, Oliver Smoot, as the unit of measure. They repeatedly laid him down end-to-end across the bridge, marking off increments in paint. His companions carried him or helped him move for each new measurement.

The final measurement determined the bridge's length to be 364.4 Smoots "plus or minus one ear". The "ear" indicated the uncertainty of the measurement, adding to the absurdity and humor of the event.

The painted markings on the bridge became a local landmark. They have been maintained and periodically repainted over the decades, often unofficially by members of the fraternity or other MIT affiliates. The Cambridge Police Department traditionally tolerates the markings because, among other reasons, they serve as useful reference points for identifying locations along the bridge.

Interestingly, Oliver R. Smoot later became a prominent figure in standards organizations, serving as Chairman of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and President of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), an ironic twist given his namesake unit's non-standard nature.

Common Uses and Applications: fathoms vs smoots

Explore the typical applications for both Fathom (imperial/US) and Smoot (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for fathoms

1. Nautical Charts and Hydrography

Depth soundings: Nautical charts mark depths in fathoms, particularly on U.S. and older British charts.

Contour lines: Lines connecting equal depths (e.g., the 10-fathom line) help mariners avoid shallow areas.

Chart abbreviations:

  • fms: Fathoms
  • fm: Fathom
  • No bottom at 100 fms: Depth exceeds 100 fathoms (600 feet)

2. Anchoring and Mooring

Anchor scope: Mariners calculate how much anchor chain to deploy based on water depth in fathoms.

Rule of thumb: Deploy 5-7 times the water depth in calm conditions, 7-10 times in storms.

Example:

  • Depth: 8 fathoms
  • Calm weather scope (5:1): 40 fathoms of chain
  • Storm scope (10:1): 80 fathoms of chain

3. Commercial Fishing

Net depth: Fishermen describe trawl net depths in fathoms.

Example: "Running trawl at 50 fathoms" (300 feet deep)

Fishing line: Deep-sea fishing lines measured in fathoms to target specific depths.

4. Recreational Boating and Diving

Depth sounders: Many recreational boat depth finders display fathoms (though meters and feet are increasingly common).

Dive planning: Divers reference depth in fathoms on nautical charts when planning dive sites.

5. Submarine Operations

Periscope depth: Submarines traditionally use fathoms for depth control.

Example: "Dive to 20 fathoms" (120 feet)

Historical note: WWII submarine logs recorded depths in fathoms; modern submarines use meters.

6. Maritime Literature and Tradition

Nautical expressions:

  • "To fathom something" = to understand its depth (metaphorically)
  • "Unfathomable" = too deep to measure or comprehend

Sailing instructions: Traditional pilot books use fathoms for approach depths and anchorage recommendations.

When to Use smoots

The Smoot is not used for any official, scientific, or commercial measurements. Its use is primarily cultural and humorous:

  • Harvard Bridge Markings: The painted markings on the bridge sidewalk are its most famous application, indicating distance in Smoots from the Boston side. They are a well-known local landmark.
  • MIT Culture and Slang: Used humorously within the MIT community and sometimes in the broader Boston area as a quirky local reference.
  • Digital Recognition: The unit gained wider recognition when it was included as a unit of measurement in Google Calculator and Google Earth's ruler tool.
  • Popular Culture: Occasionally referenced in media or tech circles as an example of a non-standard or humorous unit.

Additional Unit Information

About Fathom (fath)

How many feet are in a fathom?

Exactly 6 feet = 1 fathom.

This is the defining relationship. The fathom was standardized to 6 feet during medieval English measurement standardization.

How many meters are in a fathom?

1 fathom = 1.8288 meters (exactly).

This conversion uses the international foot definition: 1 foot = 0.3048 meters (exactly).

Calculation: 6 feet × 0.3048 m/ft = 1.8288 m

Is the fathom an SI unit?

No, the fathom is not an SI unit.

It belongs to the imperial and U.S. customary systems. The SI unit of length is the meter.

International usage: The International Hydrographic Organization recommends meters for nautical charts, but fathoms remain legal and common in U.S. and some British waters.

Is the fathom still commonly used today?

Yes, in specific maritime contexts, especially in the United States.

Still common:

  • U.S. NOAA nautical charts (many coastal charts)
  • Recreational boating in the U.S.
  • Commercial fishing fleets
  • Maritime tradition and literature

Declining usage:

  • International shipping (uses meters)
  • Most modern navies (switched to meters)
  • New chart production (increasingly metric)

Result: Fathoms persist in American waters and traditional maritime communities but are gradually being replaced by meters in international contexts.

Where does the word "fathom" come from?

From Old English "fæthm" (outstretched arms, embrace).

Etymology:

  • Proto-Germanic: *faþmaz (embrace, armful)
  • Old English: fæthm (span of outstretched arms)
  • Middle English: fadme, fathme
  • Modern English: fathom

Original meaning: The distance between fingertips when a person extends both arms horizontally—roughly 6 feet for an average man.

Verb form: "To fathom" originally meant "to measure depth with outstretched arms," later metaphorically "to comprehend deeply" (exploring the depths of understanding).

Why are anchor chains measured in shackles, not fathoms?

Both are used, but shackles are standard for large vessels.

Shackle definition: 1 shackle = 15 fathoms = 90 feet = 27.43 meters

Reason: Anchor chains are physically connected with shackle links every 15 fathoms. These physical shackles allow disconnection for maintenance and provide visual/tactile markers when deploying chain.

Usage:

  • Small vessels: Anchor chain length in fathoms
  • Large vessels and navies: Anchor chain length in shackles

Example: "Deploy 5 shackles" = 75 fathoms = 450 feet of chain

How deep is "full fathom five"?

5 fathoms = 30 feet = 9.144 meters.

Shakespeare's The Tempest: Ariel's song describes a drowned man lying at the bottom, 5 fathoms below the surface.

Context: 30 feet is deep enough that:

  • Surface light barely reaches the body
  • Free diving without equipment is challenging
  • The body would be difficult to recover without specialized equipment

This depth creates the eerie, unreachable quality of Ariel's description.

Can I convert my depth sounder from fathoms to meters?

Yes, most modern depth sounders (fishfinders, chartplotters) allow unit selection.

Typical options:

  • Feet
  • Fathoms
  • Meters

How to change (general steps):

  1. Access settings menu
  2. Find "Units" or "Depth Units"
  3. Select preferred unit (fathoms, feet, or meters)
  4. Save settings

Check manual: Specific instructions vary by manufacturer (Garmin, Lowrance, Raymarine, Furuno, etc.).

What's the difference between fathoms and cable lengths?

Both are nautical length units, but they measure different things:

Fathom:

  • 6 feet / 1.8288 meters
  • Primarily for depth measurement

Cable length:

  • UK: 608 feet = 185.3 meters (1/10 nautical mile)
  • US (historical): 720 feet = 219.5 meters (120 fathoms)
  • Primarily for horizontal distance (anchor cable, ship-to-ship spacing)

Confusion: The term "cable" sometimes referred to 100 or 120 fathoms of anchor cable, but the standardized "cable length" unit differs from this.

Do submarines still use fathoms?

Historically yes, but modern submarines use meters.

World War II era: U.S. and British submarines recorded depths in fathoms (e.g., "Dive to 50 fathoms").

Modern practice:

  • U.S. Navy: Switched to feet and meters for submarine operations
  • International: Nearly all modern navies use meters

Reason for change: International standardization, digital instrumentation, and NATO interoperability drove metrication.

About Smoot (smoot)

How long is a Smoot?

One Smoot is exactly the height of Oliver R. Smoot in 1958:

  • 5 feet 7 inches
  • 67 inches
  • 1.7018 meters

Is the Smoot an official or standardized unit?

No, the Smoot is not an official or standardized unit of measurement in any system (Imperial, US customary, or SI). It is a non-standard, humorous unit originating from a specific event.

Why is the bridge measurement "plus or minus one ear"?

The "plus or minus one ear" (often written as ± εar) reflects the humorous imprecision of the original measurement method using a person. It signifies the margin of error in a whimsical way, possibly referencing the difficulty of the final partial measurement or simply adding to the prank's absurdity.

Are the Smoot markings still on the Harvard Bridge?

Yes, the markings are traditionally repainted periodically (often by Lambda Chi Alpha members) and are considered a fixture of the bridge. During bridge renovations in 2011, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation restored the markings, acknowledging their cultural significance.

How does the Smoot compare to standard units?

  • 1 Smoot = 1.7018 meters
  • 1 Meter ≈ 0.5876 Smoots
  • 1 Smoot = 5.583 feet (5 feet 7 inches)
  • 1 Foot ≈ 0.1791 Smoots

Is the Smoot an SI unit?

No, the Smoot is not an SI unit. It is a non-standard, informal unit. The SI base unit for length is the meter (m).

What did Oliver Smoot think of the unit?

Oliver Smoot generally embraced his namesake unit with good humor throughout his life and career, often participating in events related to it at MIT.

Conversion Table: Fathom to Smoot

Fathom (fath)Smoot (smoot)
0.50.537
11.075
1.51.612
22.149
55.373
1010.746
2526.866
5053.731
100107.463
250268.657
500537.313
1,0001,074.627

People Also Ask

How do I convert Fathom to Smoot?

To convert Fathom to Smoot, enter the value in Fathom in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our length converter page to convert between other units in this category.

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What is the conversion factor from Fathom to Smoot?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Fathom and Smoot. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.

Can I convert Smoot back to Fathom?

Yes! You can easily convert Smoot back to Fathom by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Smoot to Fathom converter page. You can also explore other length conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Fathom and Smoot?

Fathom and Smoot are both standard units used in length measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our length converter for more conversion options.

For more length conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.

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Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Guide for the Use of SI

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyOfficial US standards for length measurements

SI Brochure

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units official documentation

Last verified: February 19, 2026