🌊 St to in²/s — Stokes to Square Inch/Second Converter

Convert kinematic viscosity units — m²/s, Stokes, centistokes, ft²/s and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 St = 0.155 in²/s
UnitNameValue
m²/s Square Meter/Second 0.0001
cm²/s Square Centimeter/Second 1
cSt Centistokes 100
ft²/s Square Foot/Second 0.0010763915
in²/s Square Inch/Second 0.15500031

Quick Answer

Formula: in²/s = Stokes × 0.155

Multiply any Stokes value by 0.155 to get in²/s.

Reverse: Stokes = in²/s × 6.452

Water reference (20°C): 0.01004 St = 0.001556 in²/s

Worked Examples

Water (1 cSt)
0.01004 St × 0.155 = 0.001556 in²/s
Water (1 cSt)
Air (~15 cSt)
0.15 St × 0.155 = 0.02325 in²/s
Air (~15 cSt)
SAE 30 oil (~100 cSt)
1 St × 0.155 = 0.155 in²/s
SAE 30 oil (~100 cSt)
Glycerin (~1410 cSt)
14.1 St × 0.155 = 2.186 in²/s
Glycerin (~1410 cSt)

Kinematic Viscosity of Common Fluids

Values at ~20°C unless noted. Factor: 1 St = 0.155 in²/s

Stokes (St)in²/s (in²/s)Fluid
0.00015 St2.325e-05 in²/sAir (20°C)
0.005 St0.000775 in²/sPetrol (gasoline)
0.01004 St0.001556 in²/sWater (20°C)
0.015 St0.002325 in²/sEthanol
0.03 St0.00465 in²/sDiesel fuel
0.35 St0.05425 in²/sSAE 10W motor oil
0.84 St0.1302 in²/sOlive oil
1 St0.155 in²/sSAE 30 motor oil
1.8 St0.279 in²/sSAE 90 gear oil
14.1 St2.186 in²/sGlycerin (20°C)
50 St7.75 in²/sHoney
80 St12.4 in²/sMolasses
500 St77.5 in²/sTomato ketchup
2500 St387.5 in²/sPeanut butter
1.000e+19 St1.550e+18 in²/sGlass (room temp)

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 St = 0.155 in²/s.

Water anchor

Water at 20°C = 1 cSt = 0.01 St = 10⁻⁶ m²/s. Use as reference.

Reverse

Multiply result by 6.452 to recover the original St value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Lubrication Engineer

Specifies lubricant viscosity grades in cSt at 40°C and 100°C per ISO VG and SAE standards.

Chemical Engineer

Uses kinematic viscosity in cSt for pipeline flow calculations, pump sizing, and heat exchanger design.

Petroleum Engineer

Measures crude oil and refined product viscosity in cSt for pipeline transport and refinery design.

Hydraulic Systems Engineer

Selects hydraulic fluids based on kinematic viscosity in cSt for pump compatibility and system efficiency.

Food Engineer

Characterizes food product viscosity (honey, sauces, oils) in cSt for process design and quality control.

Aerospace Engineer

Uses ft²/s or cSt for atmospheric kinematic viscosity in Reynolds number calculations for aircraft design.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Stokes and in²/s

Stokes (St)

The Stokes (St) is the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to exactly 1 cm²/s = 10⁻⁴ m²/s. It was named after Sir George Gabriel Stokes by the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1882.

The Stokes is used in petroleum engineering and some industrial viscometer specifications. Water at 20°C = 0.01 St = 1 cSt. Engine oils range from 50–200 cSt (0.5–2 St) at 40°C. Pourable molasses is about 5–10 St (500–1,000 cSt).

Interesting fact: George Stokes was also the first to explain fluorescence (Stokes shift), derive the Navier-Stokes equations of fluid motion, and develop the theory of diffraction. His work in fluid mechanics in the 1840s–1850s remains fundamental to modern engineering.

in²/s (in²/s)

Square inch per second (in²/s) is occasionally used in US precision engineering and hydraulic system specifications where inch-based units are standard. One in²/s = 6.4516×10⁻⁴ m²/s = 6.4516 St.

In²/s appears in some US hydraulic fluid specifications and industrial machinery manuals. A typical hydraulic fluid at 40°C might be specified as 0.04 in²/s (40 cSt). It is rarely used in modern practice compared to cSt.

Interesting fact: Hydraulic systems in US aircraft were historically specified using in²/s for fluid viscosity, alongside psi for pressure and gpm for flow — a fully inch-pound unit system that required separate conversion when integrating with metric components.

About Stokes to in²/s Conversion

Kinematic viscosity (ν = μ/ρ) measures how a fluid flows under gravity. The cSt is dominant in industry; m²/s is the SI unit; St and cm²/s are the CGS equivalents. Key anchor: water at 20°C ≈ 1 cSt = 10⁻⁶ m²/s = 0.01 St.

Exact factor: 1 St = 0.155 in²/s. Reverse: 1 in²/s = 6.452 St.

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.