What is 49st in Kilograms?

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What is 49 Stone (49st) in Kilograms (kg)?

What is 49st in kg? Convert 49 Stone (49st) to Kilograms (kg) and show formula, brief history on the units and quick maths for the conversion.

Enter Stone, Pounds and Ounces to convert to Kilograms


Quick Reference for Converting Stone to Kilograms

Formula
kg = st x 6.35
Quick Rough Maths
To get the Kilograms, multiply the number of Stone by 6.4
Stone (st) in 1 Kilogram
There are 0.16 Stone in 1 Kilogram
Kilograms (kg) in 1 Stone
There are 6.35 Kilograms in 1 Stone

Unit Information

Stone
/stəʊn/
Symbol: st
Unit System: Imperial

What is the Stone?

The stone is a unit of mass (acceptable for use as weight on Earth) and is part of the imperial system of units. It has the symbol st.

In historical times actual stones were used as weights, a practice that was adopted worldwide for more than 2000 years.

In Europe, up until the 19th century, the stone was frequently used in the trade industry to measure weight. Each country had their own weight of the stone which varied between regions and what was being traded. As a result, the metric system was adopted in most European countries.

In England in 1389 a stone of wool was characterized as weighing fourteen pounds (lbs). Despite the fact that a stone of different materials would not necessarily weigh exactly fourteen pounds, the stone became accepted as weighing exactly 14 lbs.

The stone is also used in sports. In horse racing it is used to describe the weight that a horse has to carry. The weight includes the jockey as well as overweight, penalties and allowances. It is also used to express human bodyweight in sports such as boxing and wrestling.

In the UK and Ireland people will often use stone and pounds (e.g. 11 st 5 lbs) to express their weight. In contrast people in the United States will most commonly use just pounds (eg. 159 lbs).

Although the Stone has not been recognised in the UK as a unit of weight since 1985, it is still the most common and popular way of expressing human weight in this country.

Kilogram
/ˈkɪləɡram/
Symbol: kg
Unit System: SI

What is the Kilogram?

The kilogram is the base SI unit for mass (acceptable for use as weight on Earth). It uses the symbol kg.

It is the only SI base unit with the prefix as part of its name (kilo). The word is derived itself from the French 'kilogramme' which was itself built from the Greek 'χίλιοι' or 'khilioi' for 'a thousand' and the Latin 'gramma' for 'small weight'.

It is now used worldwide for weighing almost anything - and has quickly become commonly recognised and understood by the masses. It is sometimes shortened to 'kilo' which can cause confusion as the prefix is used across many other units.

In 1795 the kilogram was first used in English and was defined as the mass of one litre of water. This provided a simple definition but when used in practice it was difficult as trade and commerce often involved large items. Weighing a large object using large quantities of water was inconvenient and dangerous. As a result, an object made out of a single piece of metal was created equal to one kilogram. This platinum-iridium metal, called the International Prototype Kilogram, has been kept in Sèvres, France since 1889.


Conversion Tables for Stone (st) to Kilograms (kg)