1 psi = 0.068947572932 bar http://online.unitconverterpro.com/unit-conversion/convert-alpha/pressure.html Eric Serdahl
1 bar is 14.5038 psi. Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion of pressure or stress units".
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.
bar x 14.504 = psi
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.
Ton is a weight and bar is a pressure. There is no conversion between the two.
1 bar = 100,000 newton/square meter See related links for conversion calculator.
Generally, NM (Newton Meter) is a force times the length of the arm. Bar is Pressure (force per unit of area). The conversion is not possible to calculate because of the difference in extensions (NM or N/m²). However, in engine design the load of the engine can be given in bar (cylinder pressure) but converted into torque (N-m) by the following conversion: Cylinder Pressure (bar) = Torque (N-m) * nrev * 2 * pi / Cylinder displacement (cubic meters) / 100,000 where: nrev = number of revolutions per cycle (2 for a 4-stroke engine, 1 for a 2-stroke)
You cannot. Bar is a measure of pressure whereas m3 per minute is a measure of flow rate. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you mean metal bars, they can be made in different sizes, and therefore, masses. If you mean bar as a unit of pressure, you can't really convert that, since they measure very different things.
0.6985 meters. You can simply type the problem into the google search bar and it will do the conversion for you.
First, you will have to convert the ton to units of force (about 10,000 Newton). Second, to convert the pressure to force, use the definition of pressure: pressure = force / area. In other words, the pressure required will also depend on the area over which the pressure is applied. Note 1 bar = 100,000 Pascal 1 bar = 100,000 Newton/m2
You can't really convert that. Kilogram is a unit of mass, bar is a unit of pressure; so they really measure completely different things.