PSI to bar Converter
Precision pressure conversion for hydraulic engineers, HVAC technicians, and industrial professionals. Convert PSI, bar, kPa, MPa, Pa, atm & ksi in real time.
Common PSI to bar Conversions
Frequently referenced pressure values for engineering and industrial use.
Understanding PSI to bar Conversion
A practical guide for engineers, technicians, and students working with pressure measurements across imperial and metric systems.
Where PSI Is Used
PSI (pounds per square inch) is the dominant pressure unit in the United States and countries following imperial measurement conventions. You'll encounter PSI daily in automotive tire inflation (typically 32–35 PSI for passenger vehicles), compressed air systems (90–120 PSI for workshop compressors), hydraulic power units (1,500–5,000 PSI for industrial machinery), and pressure vessel ratings. Most American pressure gauges, pump specifications, and piping system designs reference PSI as the primary unit.
Where bar Is Used
Bar is the standard pressure unit across Europe, Asia, and most international engineering specifications. One bar equals exactly 100,000 Pascals — conveniently close to atmospheric pressure at sea level (1.01325 bar). You'll find bar units in European automotive engineering (tire pressures, turbocharger boost), SCUBA diving equipment (tank pressures of 200–300 bar), industrial process control systems, pneumatic tool specifications, and HVAC refrigerant pressure charts. Many international standards including ISO and DIN specify pressure ratings in bar.
Why Engineers Convert Between PSI and bar
Global engineering teams routinely convert between PSI and bar because equipment specifications cross imperial–metric boundaries. A hydraulic pump manufactured in Germany with a 350 bar rating must be integrated into an American system where piping is rated in PSI. MPa to PSI conversion is also common for structural and FEA applications. Calibration certificates, international procurement documents, and safety compliance reports frequently require dual-unit pressure values. Understanding both units — and converting accurately between them — is essential for avoiding costly engineering errors.
Practical Engineering Examples
| Application | Typical PSI | Equivalent bar |
|---|---|---|
| Passenger car tire | 32–35 PSI | 2.2–2.4 bar |
| Workshop air compressor | 90–120 PSI | 6.2–8.3 bar |
| Hydraulic press (industrial) | 3,000 PSI | 207 bar |
| SCUBA tank (full) | ~4,350 PSI | 300 bar |
| Atmospheric pressure (sea level) | 14.7 PSI | 1.013 bar |
| High-pressure hydraulics | 5,000 PSI | 345 bar |
| CNC coolant system | 150–300 PSI | 10–21 bar |
Conversion Accuracy for Engineering Work
The exact conversion factor is 1 PSI = 0.0689475729 bar, derived from the Pascal — the SI base unit for pressure. For most industrial applications, 4 decimal places (0.0689) provides sufficient accuracy. For calibration-grade work and pressure gauge verification, use the full 6‑decimal conversion. Our converter uses the complete NIST‑traceable factor. When working with bar to MPa conversions for pressure vessel design, remember that 1 bar = 0.1 MPa exactly — a convenient relationship for quick mental calculations.
Gauge vs. Absolute Pressure
Always verify whether your application requires gauge pressure (PSIG / bar(g)) or absolute pressure (PSIA / bar(a)). Gauge pressure is measured relative to ambient atmospheric pressure — this is what most industrial pressure gauges display. Absolute pressure is measured relative to a perfect vacuum. The difference is approximately 14.7 PSI (1.013 bar) at sea level. Confusing these two can lead to significant errors in pneumatic system design, vacuum applications, and thermodynamic calculations.
Conversion Formula
The mathematical relationship between PSI and bar.
Primary Formula:
bar = PSI × 0.0689476
Inverse:
PSI = bar ÷ 0.0689476 or PSI = bar × 14.5038
Engineering Note: 1 bar = 100,000 Pa (exact by definition). 1 PSI = 6,894.75729 Pa. The conversion factor derives from the ratio of these two Pascal-equivalent values, making it traceable to the SI system.
Engineering Applications
Where PSI to bar conversion matters in real-world engineering.
Relevant Standards
International standards referencing pressure measurement and unit conversions.
- ISO 80000-4 (Pressure)
- ANSI B40.100 (Gauges)
- ASME B31.3 (Process Piping)
- DIN EN 837 (Pressure Gauges)
- ASTM E2877 (Digital Gauges)
- ISO 5167 (Flow Measurement)
- SAE J518 (Hydraulic Flanges)
- EN 13445 (Pressure Vessels)
Frequently Asked Questions
Common queries about pressure unit conversion.
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