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kg vs. kgs: Understanding Unit Symbols in the Lifting Industry

By H-Lift August 9th, 2023 79000 views
The correct abbreviation for kilogram is strictly "kg". It is the standard international abbreviation for this unit of measurement. While "kgs" is commonly used in informal settings, it is mathematically and technically incorrect.

1. kg (The Official Standard)

In the International System of Units (SI), "kg" is the standard symbol for the kilogram. A key rule of the metric system is that unit symbols are never pluralized. This prevents dangerous confusion in engineering and physics, as adding an "s" often indicates "seconds." Therefore, whether singular or plural, you write 1 kg and 50 kg.

2. kgs (The Informal Habit)

In everyday English, we are accustomed to adding an "s" to make words plural (e.g., apple to apples). Because of this linguistic habit, people frequently write "kgs" in text messages, informal emails, or casual conversation. While universally understood, it should be strictly avoided in commercial, technical, and professional documentation.

The Golden Rules of the Metric System (SI)

The metric system is designed to be completely unambiguous. It relies on strict formatting rules to prevent critical miscalculations in engineering and international trade.

1. Capitalization Matters Unit symbols are always written in lowercase (e.g., m for meters, g for grams) unless the unit is named after a person.
N for Newtons (Isaac Newton)
W for Watts (James Watt)
Exception: The liter is often capitalized as L so it is not confused with the number 1.
2. Mind the Space You must always leave a single space between the numerical value and the unit symbol.
✔ Correct: 500 kg or 10 m
✘ Incorrect: 500kg or 10m
3. No Periods Allowed Metric symbols are mathematical entities, not linguistic abbreviations. You never place a period after a unit symbol unless it sits at the absolute end of a sentence.
✔ Correct: The capacity is 50 mm.
✘ Incorrect: The capacity is 50 mm. wide.
4. Prefixes Strictly Change the Scale A prefix changes the base unit by multiples of 10. For example, "kilo" always means 1,000. Therefore, a kilometer (km) is 1,000 meters, and a kilogram (kg) is 1,000 grams.

Common Industry Conversions

When dealing with international specifications, shipping weights, or rigging equipment capacities, you will frequently navigate the divide between the Metric system and the US Customary/Imperial system. Below is a quick reference guide.

Measurement Type Metric Unit (SI) Imperial / US Equivalent Common Application
Mass / Weight 1 kilogram (kg) 2.204 pounds (lbs) General item weights, payload mass.
Heavy Mass 1 metric tonne (t) 1,000 kg (or ~2,204 lbs) Working Load Limits (WLL) for cranes & hoists.
Force 9.81 Newtons (N) 1 kilogram-force (kgf) Tension, break-away strength, proof testing.
Length 1 meter (m) 3.28 feet (ft) General spans, lifting heights, and clearances.
Small Length 25.4 millimeters (mm) 1 inch (in) Hardware sizing, chain thickness, wire rope diameters.
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