Furlong to Inch Converter
Convert furlongs to inches with our free online length converter.
Quick Answer
1 Furlong = 7920 inches
Formula: Furlong × conversion factor = Inch
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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Furlong to Inch Calculator
How to Use the Furlong to Inch Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Furlong).
- The converted value in Inch 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 Furlong to Inch: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Furlong to Inch involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Furlong = 7920 inchesExample Calculation:
Convert 10 furlongs: 10 × 7920 = 7.9200e+4 inches
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.
Need to convert to other length units?
View all Length conversions →What is a Furlong and a Inch?
The Eighth of a Mile
The furlong is defined as exactly 1/8 of a statute mile.
Precise equivalents:
- 220 yards (1/8 × 1,760 yards)
- 660 feet (220 yards × 3 feet/yard)
- 40 rods (traditional surveying unit; 1 rod = 16.5 feet)
- 10 chains (1 chain = 66 feet = 4 rods)
- 201.168 meters (exactly, using 1 yard = 0.9144 m)
Old English Etymology
"Furlang" = "furrow-long"
- Furh (Old English) = furrow (a trench cut by a plow)
- Lang (Old English) = long
Agricultural origin: In medieval open-field farming, peasants plowed long, narrow strips. The furlong represented the standard length of these strips—the distance a team of oxen could pull a heavy plow before needing to rest and turn around.
Why this specific distance?
- Oxen stamina: Approximately 220 yards before fatigue
- Practical turn-around: Long enough to be efficient, short enough to manage
- Acre relationship: 1 furlong × 1 chain (66 ft) = 1 acre (historical definition)
The Chain-Furlong-Mile System
Edmund Gunter's surveyor's chain (1620):
- 1 chain = 66 feet = 4 rods = 100 links
- 10 chains = 1 furlong
- 80 chains = 1 mile
Why 66 feet? Gunter designed the chain so that:
- 10 square chains = 1 acre (exactly)
- Easy conversion between area and distance
- Practical length for field surveying (two surveyors could carry it)
This system dominated English-speaking land surveys for 300+ years.
The inch is a unit of length in the British imperial and United States customary systems of measurement. Since the international yard and pound agreement of 1959, one inch has been defined as exactly 2.54 centimeters. This makes the inch equal to 1/12 of a foot, 1/36 of a yard, and 25.4 millimeters precisely.
The inch is denoted by the symbol in or by a double prime mark ″ (e.g., 5″ means 5 inches). In engineering drawings and construction blueprints, dimensions are typically expressed in feet and inches (e.g., 5′-3″ means 5 feet, 3 inches).
Unlike the metric system with its consistent decimal relationships, the inch exists within a complex system where 12 inches make a foot, 3 feet make a yard, and 1,760 yards make a mile. This fractional system reflects the inch's origins in human-scale measurements rather than mathematical convenience.
Note: The Furlong is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Inch belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Furlong and Inch
Anglo-Saxon Origins (5th-11th Centuries)
Open-field strip farming: Medieval English villages practiced communal agriculture, with fields divided into long, narrow strips assigned to different families.
Strip dimensions:
- Length: 1 furlong (~220 yards)
- Width: 1 chain (~22 yards, later standardized to 1 chain = 66 feet / 4 rods)
- Area: Approximately 1 acre
Plowing practice: Farmers plowed the length of the strip (1 furlong), then turned the ox team at the headland (the unplowed area at each end). The furlong emerged as the natural unit for this plowing distance.
Norman and Plantagenet Standardization (11th-14th Centuries)
Domesday Book (1086): William the Conqueror's land survey used furlongs and acres to catalog English landholdings, cementing these units in law.
Statute of 1305 (Edward I): Formalized the furlong as:
- 40 rods (1 rod = 16.5 feet = 5.5 yards)
- 1/8 mile
- Standard for all land measurement in England
Acre definition: Legally defined as 1 furlong × 4 rods (1 furlong × 66 feet), creating the enduring acre-furlong relationship.
Edmund Gunter and the Surveyor's Chain (1620)
Revolutionary tool: English mathematician Edmund Gunter invented the surveyor's chain, a 66-foot measuring chain with 100 links.
Advantages:
- Durability: Metal chain resisted wear better than ropes
- Accuracy: Standardized links prevented stretching errors
- Calculation ease: 100 links made decimal-like subdivision simple
- Furlong integration: 10 chains = 1 furlong (exact)
Global spread: Gunter's chain became the standard surveying tool throughout the British Empire, spreading the furlong to:
- North America (colonial land surveys)
- Australia (1788 onwards)
- India (British Raj)
- Africa (colonial territories)
Horse Racing Adoption (18th Century)
The Jockey Club (founded 1750): British horse racing's governing body standardized race distances in furlongs and miles.
Common race distances established:
- 5 furlongs: Sprint races
- 1 mile (8 furlongs): Classic middle distance
- 1.5 miles (12 furlongs): St. Leger Stakes (established 1776)
- 2.5 miles (20 furlongs): Royal Ascot Gold Cup
Why furlongs?
- Traditional British measurement
- Convenient divisions of the mile
- Allowed precise race distance specifications
- Established in racecourse infrastructure (distance poles)
American Horse Racing (19th Century)
Kentucky Derby (1875): Established at 1.5 miles (12 furlongs), later shortened to 1.25 miles (10 furlongs) in 1896. The furlong became America's standard racing measurement.
Belmont Stakes (1867): Originally 1.625 miles, standardized to 1.5 miles (12 furlongs)—the "Test of the Champion."
Preakness Stakes (1873): Run at 9.5 furlongs (1.1875 miles).
All three Triple Crown races use furlong-based distances.
Metrication and Decline (20th Century)
UK Weights and Measures Act (1985): Officially transitioned Britain to metric system for most purposes. The furlong became obsolete for:
- Road distances (now kilometers)
- Land surveying (now meters)
- General measurement (meters standard)
Exception: Horse racing Racing authorities worldwide retained furlongs, grandfathered as a traditional sporting measure.
Modern Persistence (21st Century)
Countries still using furlongs in horse racing:
- United Kingdom: All thoroughbred racing
- Ireland: All thoroughbred racing
- United States: All thoroughbred and quarter horse racing
- Canada: Thoroughbred racing
- Australia: Some racing uses furlongs alongside meters
- Myanmar (Burma): Road signs and general distance measurement
Global standard: Despite metrication, international horse racing maintains furlong terminology for consistency with historical records and tradition.
The inch has one of the longest continuous histories of any modern measurement unit, with roots stretching back over two millennia.
Ancient Origins: The Roman "uncia" (meaning one-twelfth) represented 1/12 of a Roman foot, similar to our modern inch. When the Romans occupied Britain, they brought this measurement system with them, establishing a tradition that would last far beyond their empire.
Medieval Definitions: Throughout the Middle Ages, various rulers attempted to standardize the inch using body-based measurements. King Edward I of England ordered in 1305 that an inch should equal the length of three barleycorns (grains of barley) laid end to end. King Edward II formalized this in 1324, making it English law. Other definitions included the width of a man's thumb at the base of the nail.
Regional Variations: Before standardization, different regions maintained slightly different inch measurements. The Tower inch, Merchant's inch, and Cloth inch all differed slightly, causing confusion in trade and construction. The French pouce (thumb) was approximately 1.066 English inches.
1959 International Agreement: The modern inch was defined by the international yard and pound agreement signed by the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. They agreed that 1 yard equals exactly 0.9144 meters, making 1 inch exactly 2.54 centimeters. This ended centuries of slight variations and created perfect mathematical alignment between imperial and metric systems.
US Survey Inch: For a time, the US maintained two slightly different inches—the international inch (2.54 cm exactly) and the US survey inch (2.540005080010160020 cm, based on the Mendenhall Order of 1893). As of January 1, 2023, the US officially retired the survey inch, making all American measurements use the international inch exclusively.
Common Uses and Applications: furlongs vs inches
Explore the typical applications for both Furlong (imperial/US) and Inch (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for furlongs
1. Thoroughbred Horse Racing
Race distance specification: Nearly all English-language racing nations specify race lengths in furlongs.
Examples:
- "A 6-furlong sprint on turf"
- "The colt won at distances from 8 to 12 furlongs"
- "She specializes in 5-furlong races"
Racecourse markers: Distance poles along the track show remaining furlongs to the finish (e.g., "4F" pole = 4 furlongs to go).
2. Breeding and Training
Horse pedigrees: Thoroughbred bloodlines are analyzed by optimal racing distances measured in furlongs.
Example: "This stallion's progeny excel at 8-10 furlongs, inheriting his stamina."
Training distances: Trainers describe workout distances in furlongs: "We gave him a strong 6-furlong breeze this morning."
3. Myanmar (Burma)
Road distances: Myanmar road signs often show distances in furlongs and miles rather than kilometers.
Example: "Yangon 12 furlongs" (1.5 miles ahead)
Why? British colonial legacy; Myanmar has resisted full metrication.
4. Historical Documents
Land deeds: Property descriptions in English-speaking countries often reference furlongs:
"Beginning at the oak tree, thence north 3 furlongs, thence east 2 furlongs..."
Literary references: Classic literature mentions furlongs for travel distances.
When to Use inches
Home Construction and Renovation
Residential construction in the United States operates almost exclusively in inches and feet. Standard framing uses 16-inch or 24-inch on-center stud spacing, creating modular dimensions that align with 48-inch-wide drywall and plywood sheets. Contractors calculate materials in board feet and square footage, but individual measurements are precise to 1/16 inch.
Kitchen cabinets come in 3-inch width increments (12″, 15″, 18″, 21″, 24″, 27″, 30″, 33″, 36″), with standard depth of 24 inches for base cabinets and 12 inches for wall cabinets. Countertop height standardizes at 36 inches, while bar counters sit at 42 inches. These dimensions have remained unchanged for decades, creating an entire ecosystem of compatible fixtures, appliances, and hardware.
Tile installation relies on precise inch measurements. Floor tiles commonly measure 12″ × 12″, 12″ × 24″, or 24″ × 24″. Wall tiles might be 3″ × 6″ subway tiles or 4″ × 4″ ceramic squares. Grout line spacing typically runs 1/16″ to 1/4″ depending on tile type. Tile setters work to extremely tight tolerances, as even 1/16-inch variation across a room becomes visibly noticeable.
Manufacturing and Machining
American manufacturing maintains imperial measurements for historical and practical reasons. Machine shops operate in decimal inches (0.001″ = 1 "thou" or 1 "mil"), with precision machining achieving tolerances of ±0.0001″ (one ten-thousandth of an inch, called a "tenth").
Thread specifications use threads per inch (TPI): 1/4″-20 means a 1/4-inch diameter bolt with 20 threads per inch. Common thread pitches include coarse (UNC) and fine (UNF) standards, with sizes ranging from #0-80 (tiny electronic screws) to several inches in diameter for industrial equipment.
Sheet metal thickness traditionally uses gauge numbers (inversely related to thickness in inches). 20-gauge steel is approximately 0.036 inches thick, while 10-gauge is 0.135 inches. However, modern manufacturing increasingly specifies thickness in decimal inches (0.063″ aluminum sheet) for clarity.
CNC (Computer Numerical Control) machines can work in either inches or millimeters, but American shops predominantly program in inches. A machinist might bore a hole to 0.5005″ diameter to accept a 1/2-inch precision shaft with 0.0005″ clearance.
Fasteners and Hardware
The American fastener industry operates entirely in imperial measurements. Screw and bolt diameters are specified in fractions (1/4″, 5/16″, 3/8″, 1/2″) or gauge numbers (#4, #6, #8, #10). Thread pitch is given in threads per inch.
Common bolt sizes and their applications:
- 1/4″-20: Electronics, light fixtures, small brackets
- 5/16″-18: Medium structural connections, automotive
- 3/8″-16: Heavy brackets, machinery, automotive chassis
- 1/2″-13: Structural steel, heavy machinery, trailer hitches
- 5/8″-11: Building construction, large structural connections
- 3/4″-10: Industrial equipment, heavy structural steel
Hex keys (Allen wrenches) come in fractional inch sizes: 1/16″, 5/64″, 3/32″, 1/8″, 5/32″, 3/16″, 7/32″, 1/4″, 5/16″, and 3/8″. Metric hex keys are incompatible—a 5mm key is 0.197″, close to but not quite matching 3/16″ (0.1875″) or 1/4″ (0.25″).
Display Technology and Photography
Television and monitor sizes are universally described by screen diagonal in inches, even in metric countries. This convention originated with cathode ray tubes, where the diagonal measurement corresponded to the visible screen area inside the bezel.
Common display sizes and their uses:
- 24″ monitors: Standard office workstation
- 27″ monitors: Popular desktop size, ideal for 1440p resolution
- 32″ monitors: Large desktop or small TV
- 43″ TVs: Small bedroom TV
- 55″ TVs: Most popular living room size
- 65″ TVs: Premium living room standard
- 75″ TVs: Home theater
- 85″+ TVs: Luxury home cinema
Photography inherited imperial measurements from early camera equipment. Sensor sizes reference inches in confusing ways—a "1-inch sensor" is actually much smaller (13.2 × 8.8 mm), referencing the outer diameter of an obsolete video camera tube rather than the actual sensor dimensions.
Large format photography uses inch measurements directly: 4×5″ and 8×10″ sheet film, or medium format 6×4.5cm, 6×6cm, 6×7cm (which are actually metric despite being called 120 film).
Plumbing and Pipe Systems
Plumbing pipe sizes in the US use nominal measurements that don't match actual dimensions. A "1/2-inch pipe" has an inside diameter of approximately 0.622″ and outside diameter of 0.840″. This naming convention dates back to when pipe walls were much thicker.
Common pipe sizes and uses:
- 1/2″ nominal: Standard water supply lines to fixtures
- 3/4″ nominal: Main water supply within house
- 1″ nominal: Supply from water meter to house
- 1½″ nominal: Sink drain lines
- 2″ nominal: Toilet drain, main stack
- 3″ nominal: Main drain, sewer connection
- 4″ nominal: Main building drain and sewer
Copper pipe uses different sizing: Type M, L, and K copper all have the same outside diameter for a given size, but different wall thicknesses. PEX (cross-linked polyethylene) tubing uses actual measurements—1/2″ PEX has a 0.500″ outside diameter.
Weather Reporting and Climatology
United States weather forecasting measures precipitation in inches. The National Weather Service issues warnings based on inch thresholds:
- Flash Flood Watch: Expected 1-2 inches in one hour or 3-4 inches in several hours
- Heavy Snow Warning: 6+ inches in 12 hours or 8+ inches in 24 hours
- Blizzard Warning: 3+ hours of heavy snow with sustained winds 35+ mph
Rainfall intensity rates:
- Light rain: <0.10 inches per hour
- Moderate rain: 0.10 to 0.30 inches per hour
- Heavy rain: >0.30 inches per hour
Annual precipitation varies dramatically across the US:
- Las Vegas, NV: 4.2 inches per year (desert)
- Phoenix, AZ: 8.3 inches per year
- Los Angeles, CA: 14.9 inches per year
- New York, NY: 46.2 inches per year
- Seattle, WA: 37.5 inches per year
- Miami, FL: 61.9 inches per year
- Mobile, AL: 67.0 inches per year (wettest major US city)
- Mt. Waialeale, HI: 450+ inches per year (one of Earth's wettest places)
Automotive and Cycling
American automotive specifications traditionally use inches:
- Wheel Diameter: 15″, 16″, 17″, 18″, 19″, 20″, 22″ (passenger vehicles)
- Tire Width: Given in millimeters, but wheel size in inches (e.g., 225/65R17)
- Ground Clearance: Often stated in inches (e.g., 8.6″ clearance)
- Cargo Space: Cubic feet, with dimensions in inches
- Engine Displacement: Historically cubic inches (350 cu in = 5.7L), now usually liters
Bicycle sizing uses a mix of systems. Mountain bike wheels measure 26″, 27.5″ (650B), or 29″ in diameter. Road bikes use the 700c standard (approximately 27″ diameter, derived from French sizing). Frame sizes might be given in inches (17″ mountain bike) or centimeters (56cm road bike) depending on manufacturer and tradition.
HVAC and Duct Work
Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems in the US specify duct sizes in inches. Rectangular ductwork might be 6″ × 10″, 8″ × 12″, or 10″ × 16″. Round ducts come in 4″, 6″, 8″, 10″, and 12″ diameters.
Air register and vent sizes are standardized in inches:
- Floor registers: 4″ × 10″, 4″ × 12″, 4″ × 14″
- Wall registers: 6″ × 10″, 6″ × 12″, 8″ × 10″
- Return air grilles: 14″ × 24″, 16″ × 20″, 20″ × 20″
Furnace filters use inch sizing: 16″ × 20″ × 1″, 16″ × 25″ × 1″, 20″ × 25″ × 4″. The first two dimensions are the face size, and the third is the thickness. Standard filters are 1″ thick, while pleated media filters might be 4″ or 5″ thick for better filtration and airflow.
Additional Unit Information
About Furlong (fur)
How many furlongs are in a mile?
Exactly 8 furlongs = 1 statute mile.
This is the defining relationship:
- 1 furlong = 1/8 mile = 0.125 miles
- 1 mile = 8 furlongs = 1,760 yards = 5,280 feet
How many yards/feet/meters are in a furlong?
1 furlong equals:
- 220 yards (exactly)
- 660 feet (220 × 3)
- 201.168 meters (exactly, using international yard definition)
Derivation: 1 mile = 1,760 yards 1/8 mile = 1,760 ÷ 8 = 220 yards
Where is the furlong used most often today?
Primary use: Horse racing
Countries:
- United Kingdom: All thoroughbred flat and jump racing
- Ireland: All racing
- United States: Thoroughbred and quarter horse racing standard
- Canada: Thoroughbred racing
- Australia: Some racing (alongside meters)
Secondary use:
- Myanmar (Burma): Road distances, general measurement
Historical references:
- Land deeds and property surveys (historical documents)
- Classic literature
Is the furlong an SI unit?
No, the furlong is not part of the International System of Units (SI).
It belongs to the imperial and U.S. customary measurement systems. The SI unit for length is the meter.
Legal status:
- UK: Permitted for specific uses (horse racing, historical contexts)
- US: Legal, but not commonly used outside racing
- Myanmar: Customary unit
Why is it called a furlong?
Etymology: Old English "furlang" = "furrow-long"
Origin:
- Furh = furrow (trench cut by plow)
- Lang = long
Agricultural meaning: The distance a team of oxen could plow a furrow before needing to rest—approximately 220 yards.
Historical context: Medieval open-field strip farming created long, narrow fields. The furlong defined the standard strip length, while the chain (66 feet) defined the width, producing a 1-acre plot.
Why does horse racing still use furlongs?
Historical tradition: British horse racing standardized on furlongs in the 18th century (Jockey Club, 1750). Racing infrastructure, records, and terminology built around furlongs over 270+ years.
Practical advantages:
- Convenient divisions: 1 mile divides evenly into 8 furlongs, creating simple race distances (5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12 furlongs)
- Global consistency: Using furlongs allows comparison across centuries of racing records
- Infrastructure: Historic racecourses designed with furlong markers and measurements
Resistance to change: Metrication efforts in the 1970s-1990s met strong resistance from racing traditionalists. The sport successfully lobbied to preserve furlongs as a cultural heritage measure.
How long is the Kentucky Derby in furlongs?
10 furlongs = 1.25 miles = 2,012 meters
History:
- 1875-1895: 1.5 miles (12 furlongs)
- 1896-present: 1.25 miles (10 furlongs)
The distance was shortened to 10 furlongs in 1896 and has remained unchanged since, becoming known as "The most exciting two minutes in sports" (approximate finishing time for winners).
What's the difference between a furlong and a chain?
Both are imperial length units, but different sizes:
Furlong:
- 220 yards = 660 feet = 201.168 m
- Used for longer distances (racing, field lengths)
Chain (Gunter's chain):
- 66 feet = 22 yards = 20.1168 m
- 1 furlong = 10 chains
- Used for detailed land surveying
Historical relationship: Edmund Gunter designed the chain so that 10 chains = 1 furlong, creating an integrated surveying system.
Can I convert racecourse distances from furlongs to meters?
Yes, multiply by 201.168.
Common conversions:
- 5 furlongs × 201.168 = 1,006 m (~1 km)
- 6 furlongs × 201.168 = 1,207 m
- 8 furlongs × 201.168 = 1,609 m (~1 mile)
- 10 furlongs × 201.168 = 2,012 m
- 12 furlongs × 201.168 = 2,414 m
Note: Many international racing jurisdictions use round meter distances (1200m, 1600m, 2000m) rather than exact furlong equivalents.
Is a furlong longer than a kilometer?
No, a furlong is shorter than a kilometer.
Comparison:
- 1 furlong = 201.168 meters = 0.201 km
- 1 kilometer = 1,000 meters ≈ 4.97 furlongs (~5 furlongs)
Memory aid: 5 furlongs ≈ 1 kilometer
About Inch (in)
How many inches are in a foot?
There are exactly 12 inches in one foot. This relationship is fixed by definition in the US customary and imperial systems. The division of a foot into 12 parts dates back to ancient Roman measurements and remained standard because 12 is easily divisible by 2, 3, 4, and 6—making fractional measurements convenient in practical applications.
To convert feet to inches, multiply by 12. To convert inches to feet, divide by 12.
- 5 feet = 5 × 12 = 60 inches
- 48 inches = 48 ÷ 12 = 4 feet
- 3 feet 7 inches = (3 × 12) + 7 = 43 inches total
How many centimeters are in an inch?
One inch equals exactly 2.54 centimeters. This relationship was established by the 1959 international yard and pound agreement, which defined the yard as exactly 0.9144 meters. Since one inch equals 1/36 of a yard, it works out to precisely 2.54 cm.
This is one of the few perfectly defined relationships between imperial and metric systems. There's no rounding or approximation—it's exactly 2.54000... cm per inch by international agreement.
To convert inches to centimeters, multiply by 2.54. To convert centimeters to inches, divide by 2.54.
- 10 inches = 10 × 2.54 = 25.4 cm
- 50 cm = 50 ÷ 2.54 = 19.685 inches
Why does the US still use inches instead of the metric system?
The United States remains one of only three countries (along with Myanmar and Liberia) not officially using the metric system, largely due to historical momentum, infrastructure costs, and cultural identity.
Infrastructure Investment: The US has trillions of dollars invested in imperial-based infrastructure—road signs showing miles, construction materials in feet and inches, manufacturing equipment calibrated in thousandths of an inch, pipelines in inch diameters, and billions of blueprints in feet-inches notation. Converting all of this would cost an estimated $370 billion to $1 trillion.
Industry Standardization: American manufacturing, construction, and engineering have perfected systems around imperial measurements over centuries. Millions of workers are trained in inches and feet. Changing would require retraining entire industries and replacing countless tools, gauges, and documentation.
Cultural Resistance: Americans intuitively understand inches, feet, and miles from childhood. Polls consistently show that most Americans oppose mandatory metric conversion, viewing it as unnecessary government overreach. Unlike temperature (where Fahrenheit provides finer granularity for weather), length measurements in inches don't provide any practical advantage—but changing feels like abandoning tradition.
Failed Conversion Attempts: Congress passed the Metric Conversion Act in 1975, making metric the "preferred system" but keeping adoption voluntary. Without enforcement, industries continued using imperial. A 1982 push to convert road signs to kilometers was abandoned after fierce public backlash.
Partial Adoption: The US actually uses metric extensively in science, medicine, military, and some industries. All US customary units are now legally defined in terms of metric units. Americans live in a hybrid system—drinking 2-liter sodas while driving 65 miles per hour.
What's the difference between decimal inches and fractional inches?
Fractional inches express measurements as common fractions: 1/2″, 3/4″, 5/8″, 7/16″, 15/32″. This system dominates carpentry, construction, and mechanical work. Rulers and tape measures show fraction markings—typically down to 1/16″ for standard use and 1/32″ for precision carpentry.
Decimal inches express measurements as decimal values: 0.5″, 0.75″, 0.625″, 0.4375″, 0.46875″. Engineering drawings, machining, and manufacturing prefer decimals because they're easier to calculate with, especially for tolerances and fits.
Both systems describe the same measurements:
- 1/2″ = 0.500″
- 3/4″ = 0.750″
- 5/8″ = 0.625″
- 1/8″ = 0.125″
Machine shops often work in "thousandths" (0.001″, called a "thou" or "mil") for precision. A machinist might drill a 0.257″ diameter hole—trying to express this as a fraction (257/1000″) would be impractical.
Carpenters and builders work in fractions because tape measures show fractions, and because halving measurements repeatedly (1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32) is natural in layout work.
How accurate is an inch measurement?
The definition of an inch is exact: 2.54 centimeters precisely, or 25.4 millimeters. There's no uncertainty in the standard itself.
Practical accuracy depends on the measuring tool:
- Ruler or tape measure: Accurate to roughly ±1/16″ (±1.6 mm) for careful work
- Steel ruler with machinist's markings: ±1/32″ (±0.8 mm) when read carefully
- Dial calipers: ±0.001″ (±0.025 mm) typical accuracy
- Digital calipers: ±0.0005″ (±0.013 mm) for quality instruments
- Micrometers: ±0.0001″ (±0.0025 mm) for precision tools
- Coordinate measuring machines (CMM): ±0.00005″ (±0.0013 mm) or better
Different trades require different precision:
- House framing: ±1/8″ is usually acceptable
- Finish carpentry: ±1/16″ or better for visible joints
- Cabinetmaking: ±1/32″ for tight-fitting doors and drawers
- Machining: ±0.001″ (one thousandth) for standard fits
- Precision machining: ±0.0001″ (one ten-thousandth, called a "tenth")
- Gauge blocks (calibration standards): Accurate to millionths of an inch
Can I use a metric wrench on an inch bolt?
Generally no—metric and imperial fasteners are incompatible. While some sizes appear close, using the wrong wrench damages bolt heads and nuts.
Why they're incompatible: Metric sockets and wrenches are sized in millimeters (8mm, 10mm, 13mm, 17mm), while imperial fasteners use fractional inches (5/16″, 3/8″, 1/2″, 5/8″). These don't align:
- 13mm = 0.512″ (close to 1/2″ = 0.500″, but not exact)
- 10mm = 0.394″ (between 3/8″ = 0.375″ and 7/16″ = 0.438″)
The result: A 13mm wrench on a 1/2″ bolt will be 0.012″ too large—enough to round off the hex corners with sufficient force. A 10mm wrench on a 3/8″ bolt won't fit at all.
Exception: In an emergency, you might carefully use a slightly large adjustable wrench or locking pliers, but this risks damaging the fastener. Always use the correct system—if you work on American-made equipment, you need inch tools. For European or Japanese equipment, you need metric tools.
Many professional mechanics maintain complete sets of both imperial and metric sockets, wrenches, and hex keys—a significant investment but essential for working on diverse equipment.
What does the ″ symbol mean?
The double prime symbol ″ represents inches in technical drawings, blueprints, and mathematical contexts. A single prime ′ represents feet.
Standard notation:
- 5′ = five feet
- 5″ = five inches
- 5′-3″ = five feet, three inches
- 5′-3½″ = five feet, three and a half inches
Origin: These symbols come from astronomical and geometric notation, where they represented divisions of degrees (°). A degree divided by 60 gives minutes (′), and a minute divided by 60 gives seconds (″). This notation was borrowed for feet and inches because of the similar subdividing relationship.
Common substitution: Because typewriters and keyboards lack easy access to proper prime symbols, people often substitute:
- Apostrophe (') for feet: 5' tall
- Quotation mark (") for inches: 5" wide
- Both together: 5'-3" tall
In professional CAD drawings and blueprints, proper prime symbols (′ and ″) are standard. In casual writing, apostrophes and quotes are acceptable and universally understood.
How is screen size measured in inches?
Display screen sizes (TVs, monitors, tablets, smartphones) are always measured diagonally from one corner to the opposite corner, measuring only the visible screen area (not the bezel or frame).
Why diagonal? This convention originated with cathode ray tubes (CRTs), where the diagonal measurement corresponded to the size of the round tube face. When rectangular screens became standard, the diagonal measurement convention persisted for consistency.
Practical dimensions for common sizes:
TVs (16:9 aspect ratio):
- 55″ diagonal = approximately 48″ wide × 27″ tall
- 65″ diagonal = approximately 56.7″ wide × 31.9″ tall
- 75″ diagonal = approximately 65.4″ wide × 36.8″ tall
Monitors (16:9 aspect ratio):
- 24″ diagonal = approximately 20.9″ wide × 11.8″ tall
- 27″ diagonal = approximately 23.5″ wide × 13.2″ tall
Why this matters: When planning where to place a TV or monitor, you need the actual width and height, not the diagonal. Always check specifications for exact dimensions. Also add 1-2 inches in each direction to account for the bezel.
How do I convert inches to millimeters?
To convert inches to millimeters, multiply by 25.4. This gives you an exact result because the inch is legally defined as exactly 2.54 centimeters (25.4 millimeters).
Formula: millimeters = inches × 25.4
Examples:
- 1 inch = 1 × 25.4 = 25.4 mm
- 2 inches = 2 × 25.4 = 50.8 mm
- 0.5 inches = 0.5 × 25.4 = 12.7 mm
- 10 inches = 10 × 25.4 = 254 mm
- 3.25 inches = 3.25 × 25.4 = 82.55 mm
Converting fractional inches: First convert the fraction to a decimal, then multiply by 25.4:
- 1/2″ = 0.5″ = 0.5 × 25.4 = 12.7 mm
- 3/4″ = 0.75″ = 0.75 × 25.4 = 19.05 mm
- 5/8″ = 0.625″ = 0.625 × 25.4 = 15.875 mm
- 1/8″ = 0.125″ = 0.125 × 25.4 = 3.175 mm
Reverse conversion (mm to inches): Divide millimeters by 25.4:
- 50 mm = 50 ÷ 25.4 = 1.969 inches (approximately 2 inches)
- 100 mm = 100 ÷ 25.4 = 3.937 inches (approximately 4 inches)
For quick mental estimates, remember that 25mm ≈ 1 inch. This gives you approximately correct values for rough planning, though it slightly underestimates (25mm is actually 0.984 inches).
Why are lumber dimensions not the actual size?
Lumber in the United States is sold using nominal dimensions—traditional names that don't match the actual milled size. A "2×4" is actually 1.5″ × 3.5″, not 2″ × 4″.
Historical reason: Originally, rough-cut lumber fresh from the sawmill did measure 2″ × 4″. However, the lumber then went through drying (removing moisture) and planing (smoothing surfaces), which reduced dimensions by approximately 1/4″ on each face. Rather than rename everything, the industry kept nominal sizing for ordering convenience while standardizing actual dimensions.
Standard actual dimensions:
- 2×4 → 1.5″ × 3.5″
- 2×6 → 1.5″ × 5.5″
- 2×8 → 1.5″ × 7.25″
- 2×10 → 1.5″ × 9.25″
- 2×12 → 1.5″ × 11.25″
- 4×4 → 3.5″ × 3.5″
- 1×4 → 0.75″ × 3.5″
- 1×6 → 0.75″ × 5.5″
These dimensions are mandated by the American Softwood Lumber Standard (PS 20-20) and are consistent across all retailers.
Why this system persists: Construction is designed around nominal dimensions. Studs are spaced "16 inches on center" in walls, but everyone understands the actual stud is 1.5″ thick. Changing to actual dimension naming would require rewriting building codes, retraining millions of workers, and changing century-old industry conventions.
Important for DIY: Always design projects using actual lumber dimensions, not nominal. If you're building something that needs to be exactly 4 inches wide, a 2×4 laid flat won't work—it's only 3.5 inches.
What is the smallest measurement on a standard tape measure?
Most standard tape measures used in construction and carpentry show markings down to 1/16 inch as the smallest division. Each inch is divided into 16 equal parts, with various line lengths to indicate fractions:
- Longest lines: Every inch (1″, 2″, 3″...)
- Next longest: Half inches (1/2″, 1½″, 2½″...)
- Medium lines: Quarter inches (1/4″, 3/4″, 1¼″...)
- Shorter lines: Eighths (1/8″, 3/8″, 5/8″, 7/8″)
- Shortest lines: Sixteenths (1/16″, 3/16″, 5/16″... through 15/16″)
Precision tape measures for finish carpentry may show 1/32-inch divisions, doubling the number of marks. These are harder to read but provide twice the precision for fine woodworking.
Reading tape measures: The marks use a graduated system where longer marks indicate simpler fractions. The 1/2″ mark is the longest subdivision line, the 1/4″ and 3/4″ marks are slightly shorter, the 1/8″ marks are shorter still, and the 1/16″ marks are the shortest. This visual hierarchy makes it easier to count marks and identify positions quickly without having to count every line.
Practical accuracy: Even with 1/16″ markings, human error in marking and cutting typically limits practical accuracy to about ±1/16″ for construction work. Finish carpentry might achieve ±1/32″ with careful measurement and sharp marking.
For measurements more precise than 1/32 inch, professionals use dial calipers (readable to 0.001″) or digital calipers rather than tape measures.
Is an inch the same at different temperatures?
Technically, no. Metal expands when it gets hot. A steel ruler that is exactly 12 inches at room temperature will be slightly longer in the summer heat. This is why official standards are measured at 20°C (68°F). In high-precision manufacturing, factories are kept at a constant temperature so their measurements don't "drift."
What is the connection between barleycorns and shoe sizes?
The medieval definition of an inch as "three barleycorns" actually survives today in your shoes! One "size" in the UK and US shoe systems is exactly one barleycorn (1/3 of an inch). This is why a Size 10 is 1/3 of an inch longer than a Size 9.
Why is 120 film called 120 if it's 2.4 inches wide?
The name "120" was actually a catalog number given by Kodak in 1901. It doesn't relate to its width in millimeters or inches directly. However, the film is approximately 2.4 inches (61mm) wide, allowing for a variety of image formats like 2.25" x 2.25" (6x6).
What is a "Square Inch" of pressure?
In the US, tire pressure and steam pressure are measured in PSI (Pounds per Square Inch). It tells you how much force is pressing against a one-inch by one-inch square. For example, a car tire typically has 32 PSI.
How many inches are in a "Hands" measurement for horses?
Horses are measured in "hands," and one hand is exactly 4 inches. If a horse is 15 hands high, it means they are 60 inches tall at the shoulder.
What is the "Inch of Mercury" (inHg)?
Meteorologists use "inches of mercury" to measure air pressure. It refers to how high the pressure of the atmosphere can push a column of liquid mercury inside a glass tube. Standard sea-level pressure is about 29.92 inches.
Are "Mils" and "Millimeters" the same?
No! This is a dangerous mistake.
- In the US, a Mil is 1/1000th of an inch (0.001").
- A Millimeter is 1/1000th of a meter. One millimeter is about 39 mils. Mixing them up in manufacturing can lead to catastrophic failures.
Why are TV screens measured diagonally instead of width?
It started as a marketing trick in the early days of TV (when tubes were round). It made the number sound larger! A 55-inch diagonal TV sounds bigger than a 48-inch wide TV, even though they are the same physical object.
Can an inch be divided into 10 parts?
Yes! While tape measures use 8, 16, or 32 parts, engineers and land surveyors often use "Engineers' Scales" where an inch is divided into 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60 parts. This makes it easier to use decimal math (e.g., 0.1", 0.2").
How many inches is a standard "brick"?
A standard US modular brick is 7 5/8 inches long, which allows for a 3/8-inch mortar joint to make the total unit exactly 8 inches long. This "8-inch module" is the secret to why brick patterns fit so perfectly together.
Conversion Table: Furlong to Inch
| Furlong (fur) | Inch (in) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 3,960 |
| 1 | 7,920 |
| 1.5 | 11,880 |
| 2 | 15,840 |
| 5 | 39,600 |
| 10 | 79,200 |
| 25 | 198,000 |
| 50 | 396,000 |
| 100 | 792,000 |
| 250 | 1,980,000 |
| 500 | 3,960,000 |
| 1,000 | 7,920,000 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Furlong to Inch?
To convert Furlong to Inch, enter the value in Furlong 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.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Furlong to Inch?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Furlong and Inch. 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 Inch back to Furlong?
Yes! You can easily convert Inch back to Furlong by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Inch to Furlong converter page. You can also explore other length conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Furlong and Inch?
Furlong and Inch 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.
Helpful Conversion Guides
Learn more about unit conversion with our comprehensive guides:
📚 How to Convert Units
Step-by-step guide to unit conversion with practical examples.
🔢 Conversion Formulas
Essential formulas for length and other conversions.
⚖️ Metric vs Imperial
Understand the differences between measurement systems.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
Learn about frequent errors and how to avoid them.
All Length Conversions
Other Length Units and Conversions
Explore other length units and their conversion options:
- Meter (m) • Furlong to Meter
- Kilometer (km) • Furlong to Kilometer
- Hectometer (hm) • Furlong to Hectometer
- Decimeter (dm) • Furlong to Decimeter
- Centimeter (cm) • Furlong to Centimeter
- Millimeter (mm) • Furlong to Millimeter
- Foot (ft) • Furlong to Foot
- Yard (yd) • Furlong to Yard
- Mile (mi) • Furlong to Mile
- Nautical Mile (NM) • Furlong to Nautical Mile
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
National Institute of Standards and Technology — Official US standards for length measurements
Bureau International des Poids et Mesures — International System of Units official documentation
Last verified: February 19, 2026