Submitted by cheeseunused t3_11djvlc in explainlikeimfive
Red_AtNight t1_ja91kto wrote
While pounds are indeed a unit of force, most people treat them as a unit of mass assuming Earth's gravity.
When someone says that 1 pound is 454 grams, they mean a mass that weighs 1 lb in Earth's gravity has a mass of 454 grams.
r2k-in-the-vortex t1_ja9aifu wrote
Pound is not a unit of force.
>1 pound (avoirdupois)= 0.453 592 37 kilogram
https://www.ngs.noaa.gov/PUBS_LIB/FedRegister/FRdoc59-5442.pdf
breckenridgeback t1_ja9ihy6 wrote
Yeah, pound is a mass unit, but we treat it as a force unit via the [pound-force](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_(force)).
r2k-in-the-vortex t1_ja9wooh wrote
That is a completely different unit, with a completely different abbreviation of lbf. Pound-force is defined as: "weight of one pound"
Pound has abbreviation of lb, it's a unit of mass and is equal to 0.45359237kg
You cannot treat pound as unit of force, because it isn't one. Same as you can't treat pound as unit of torque or unit of energy. Pound-force, pound-foot and foot-pound are all completely different units of completely different quantities and they are definitely not the same unit as pound.
breckenridgeback t1_ja9znac wrote
It is, formally speaking, a different unit. But for our purposes here on the Earth, where the vast majority of practical use of the units is conducted, the two are proportional and that proportionality is constant enough for the difference not to matter.
r2k-in-the-vortex t1_jaa1top wrote
If you can't tell a difference between force and mass you might as well not bother measuring anything and just eyeball it.
And the difference of how much a pound weighs varies significantly, at poles its half a percent more than on equator. That's a lot, half a percent makes a difference between a buy and a sell.
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