🔧 dyn·cm to N·m — Dyne-centimeter to Newton-meter Converter

Convert torque units — Newton-meter, pound-force foot, kilogram-force meter and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 dyn·cm = 1.0000e-7 N·m
UnitNameValue
N·m Newton-meter 1e-7
kN·m Kilonewton-meter 1.000000e-10
lbf·ft Pound-force Foot 7.375610e-8
lbf·in Pound-force Inch 8.8507324e-7
kgf·m Kilogram-force Meter 1.019716e-8
kgf·cm Kilogram-force Centimeter 0.0000010197162

Quick Answer

Formula: Newton-meter = Dyne-centimeter × 1.0000e-7

Multiply any Dyne-centimeter value by 1.0000e-7 to get Newton-meter.

Reverse: Dyne-centimeter = Newton-meter × 1e+07

Worked Examples

1 dyn·cm
1 dyn·cm × 1.0000e-7 = 1.0000e-7 N·m
Single unit.
10 dyn·cm
10 dyn·cm × 1.0000e-7 = 1.0000e-6 N·m
10 units.
100 dyn·cm
100 dyn·cm × 1.0000e-7 = 1.0000e-5 N·m
100 units.
1000 dyn·cm
1000 dyn·cm × 1.0000e-7 = 1.0000e-4 N·m
1,000 units.

Dyne-centimeter to Newton-meter Conversion Table

Common torque values — factor: 1 dyn·cm = 1.0000e-7 N·m

Dyne-centimeter (dyn·cm)Newton-meter (N·m)Context
1 dyn·cm1.000e-07 N·mAtomic scale
10 dyn·cm1.000e-06 N·mMicro mechanism
100 dyn·cm1.000e-05 N·mTiny spring
1000 dyn·cm1.000e-04 N·mSmall mechanism
1e+04 dyn·cm0.001 N·mInstrument
1e+05 dyn·cm0.01 N·mPrecision device
1e+06 dyn·cm0.1 N·mSmall motor
1e+07 dyn·cm1 N·m1 N·m
1e+08 dyn·cm10 N·m10 N·m
1.000e+09 dyn·cm100 N·m100 N·m
1.000e+10 dyn·cm1000 N·m1 kN·m
1.000e+11 dyn·cm1e+04 N·m10 kN·m
1.000e+12 dyn·cm1e+05 N·m100 kN·m
1.000e+13 dyn·cm1e+06 N·m1 MN·m
1.000e+14 dyn·cm1e+07 N·m10 MN·m

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 dyn·cm = 1.0000e-7 N·m.

N·m anchor

Use N·m as the bridge: convert dyn·cm → N·m → N·m.

Reverse

Multiply result by 1e+07 to recover the original dyn·cm value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Automotive Engineer

Specifies engine torque output, drivetrain components, and wheel bolt torque in N·m and lbf·ft.

Mechanical Engineer

Designs fastener assemblies with torque specifications to achieve required bolt preload.

Robotics Engineer

Selects motors and servos based on torque ratings in N·m or kgf·cm for joint actuation.

Structural Engineer

Calculates bending moments in beams and frames — moment = torque in structural analysis.

Aircraft Maintenance Technician

Follows torque charts in lbf·in and lbf·ft for airframe and engine fasteners per maintenance manuals.

Industrial Equipment Technician

Applies correct torque to flanges, pipe fittings, and coupling bolts using calibrated torque wrenches.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Dyne-centimeter and Newton-meter

Dyne-centimeter (dyn·cm)

The dyne-centimeter (dyn·cm) is the CGS unit of torque, equal to 10⁻⁷ N·m. It was the standard torque unit in the CGS system widely used in physics before SI adoption.

Dyn·cm appears in astrophysics and some older physics literature. Magnetic dipole moments of particles are sometimes expressed in dyn·cm/G. The torque on a compass needle in Earth's magnetic field is on the order of 10² dyn·cm.

Interesting fact: One N·m = 10,000,000 dyn·cm exactly. The CGS system's dyne (10⁻⁵ N) and centimeter combine to give a unit 10⁷ times smaller than the N·m, making it inconveniently small for most engineering applications.

Newton-meter (N·m)

The newton-meter (N·m) is the SI unit of torque (and also of energy — though context distinguishes them). It equals the torque produced by a force of one newton applied at a perpendicular distance of one meter from the pivot point. It was formally adopted with the SI system in 1960.

N·m is the universal torque unit in engineering specifications worldwide. Engine torque, fastener torque specifications, structural bolt preloads, and industrial machinery torque ratings all use N·m in metric specifications.

Interesting fact: 1 N·m of torque equals 1 joule of energy — but they are conceptually different: torque is a rotational force (vector), energy is a scalar. The same unit is used because both involve force × distance, just in different geometric contexts.

About Dyne-centimeter to Newton-meter Conversion

Converting Dyne-centimeter to Newton-meter is common across automotive, mechanical, robotics, and structural engineering. Metric countries use N·m and kN·m; the US uses lbf·ft and lbf·in; robotics uses kgf·cm. Accurate conversion is essential when working with international workshop manuals, equipment specs, and torque wrenches.

Quick reference: 10 dyn·cm = 1.0000e-6 N·m. Reverse: 1 N·m = 1e+07 dyn·cm. Exact factor: 1 dyn·cm = 1.0000e-7 N·m.

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