Bar to PSI
Formula
psi = bar × 14.503773773.
Quick reference table
| Bar (bar) | Pounds per square inch (psi) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 14.503774 |
| 5 | 72.518869 |
| 10 | 145.037738 |
| 100 | 1450.377377 |
Recent conversions
FAQ
Are your constants exact?
Yes. Based on SI relation.
How do you round?
We display up to 4 decimals for mid-range numbers and more for small values.
Practical Use Cases
- Tire pressure, compressors, and equipment specs.
Step-by-Step Derivation
If a base relation gives 1 psi in terms of bar, multiply your bar value by that constant to get psi. Alternatively, if 1 bar equals a fixed amount of psi, multiply by that instead.
- Identify the base relation on this page (exact when available).
- Multiply your Bar (bar) by that constant.
- Round the Pounds per square inch (psi) for readability if needed.
Inverse Check (Quick Validity Test)
Take your psi result and convert it back to bar. If you land near your original input (within rounding), the calculation is consistent.
Common Mistakes
- Confusing psi with bar. Always confirm the direction (bar→psi).
- Mixing US and Imperial measures (gallon, fluid ounce) — our pages specify the variant used.
- Over-rounding too early. Keep precision through the calculation and round at the end.
Extended Quick Table Tips
Here are handy anchors you can sanity-check:
1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 bar to psi. Use them as mental checkpoints.
Advanced & Edge Use Cases
- Batch planning: convert bar to psi for multiple items and sum totals.
- Spec verification: compare vendor specs in psi with your measurements in bar using back-conversion.
- Reporting: round display only at the end and list both units (e.g., “35 bar ≈ 35.0 psi”).
Worked Numeric Examples
Below are illustrative examples using the page’s formula. Your calculator above performs the precise math:
| Bar (bar) | Pounds per square inch (psi) |
|---|---|
| 35 | 35.0 |
| 16 | 16.0 |
| 11 | 11.0 |
Glossary & Search Tips
Symbol: bar → psi
Long names: Bar → Pounds per square inch
Common query patterns: “bar to psi”, “convert bar to pounds per square inch”
Accessibility Notes
- Labels announce Bar (bar) and Pounds per square inch (psi) for screen readers.
- Focus order flows input → convert button → result.
- Press Tab to move forward and Shift+Tab to move back.
Applying Pressure Conversions Safely
Pressure conversions matter most when safety or equipment performance is involved: tires, compressors, tools, and some lab gear.
- Check the manual's units (psi, bar, kPa) before changing any settings on equipment.
- Set a safe working range in your preferred unit and convert that range once, then re-use it.
- Log pressure readings from gauges consistently so patterns are easy to see over time.
- Never exceed rated limits just because a conversion looks “close enough”—engineering margins exist for a reason.
Pressure Conversions in Everyday Maintenance
- Write down recommended tire pressures in all units you encounter at home, work, or on the road.
- Check gauge units twice before adjusting anything, especially on shared or public equipment.
- Keep before-and-after readings when you change settings so you can revert if needed.
- Use the same unit system across manuals, gauges, and digital tools whenever possible.
Getting a Feel for Pressure Values
- Note the normal range for your car, bike, or tools and convert it once into all units you might see.
- Pay attention to how ride quality or tool performance changes as you adjust within that safe range.
- Photograph labels or manuals that list pressures so you can compare later when using a different gauge.
- Use this converter when reading guides from other countries so you can apply the same advice safely.
Keeping Everyone on the Same Page With Pressure
- Write down the agreed pressure range in a shared doc or notebook where everyone can see it.
- Include both units when necessary (for example, psi and bar) during a transition period.
- Note where the guidance came from—a manual, a mechanic, or an official standard.
- Store before/after values so others can understand what changed.
Pressure Checks Before You Change Settings
- Review the recommended range from the manual or official label one more time.
- Convert any online advice into the units on your actual gauge.
- Adjust in small steps and record the values you pass through.
- Monitor behavior (ride feel, tool performance) after each adjustment instead of making large jumps.
Recording Pressure Norms in One Place
- Write down recommended pressures for tires, tools, and equipment you maintain.
- Include both minimum and maximum where ranges are provided.
- Convert each value into all unit systems you're likely to see.
- Keep this record near your pump, compressor, or maintenance corner.