A common unit conversion in engineering is from velocity meters for a pump head to pressure bars. This conversion is done by multiplying the pressure by 10.197 and dividing this value by the specific gravity.
Meters is a unit of length, bar is a unit of pressure. You can't convert between the two.
Those measure different things, so you can't convert that. Bar is a measure of pressure; meter is a unit of length.
90 meters. Every 10 meters, the pressure increases by approximately 1 bar, to this, you have to add the atmospheric pressure, which is also approximate 1 bar.
Water pressure increases by approximately 1 bar for every 10 meters of depth in freshwater. At a depth of 10 meters, the water pressure would be about 1 bar, in addition to the atmospheric pressure at the surface, which is roughly 1 bar as well. Therefore, the total pressure at 10 meters depth would be about 2 bars.
Pressure at a given depth of water can be calculated using a formula like, "#1 #1kgf/cm2." Therefore, water pressure at 2000 meters below sea level will be around 1.2 bar.
To convert bar to psia (pounds per square inch absolute), you need to add the atmospheric pressure in psia to the pressure in bar. 1 bar is approximately equal to 14.5038 psia (standard atmospheric pressure at sea level).
You can't convert meters to bars, or bars to meters. The two are utterly incompatible. Meters is a unit of length, bars is a unit of pressure. if you mean depth of water then 20 bar = 200 metres (close)
1 psi = 0.068947572932 bar http://online.unitconverterpro.com/unit-conversion/convert-alpha/pressure.html Eric Serdahl
Initially, a minimum of 5.2 bar is needed to convert air to liquid under pressure. This pressure is for the initial process. For the final process, less than 1.7 bar is needed.
0.6985 meters. You can simply type the problem into the google search bar and it will do the conversion for you.
Get a centimeter ruler and then convert it to what measurement you want.
In water, every 10 meters you go down, the pressure increases by 1 bar, approximately. To this you must add the air pressure, which is also approximately 1 bar (depending on whether you want gauge pressure or absolute pressure).