Collectively, the variants of the FPS system were the most common system in technical publications in English until the middle of the 20th century.
Pound as mass unit When the pound is used as a unit of mass, the core of the
coherent system is similar and functionally equivalent to the corresponding subsets of the
International System of Units (SI), using
metre, kilogram and second (MKS), and the earlier
centimetre–gram–second system of units (CGS). This system is often called the
Absolute English System. In this sub-system, the unit of
force is a derived unit known as the
poundal. Everett (1861) proposed the metric
dyne and
erg as the units of force and energy in the FPS system. Latimer Clark's (1891) "Dictionary of Measures" contains
celo (acceleration),
vel or
velo (velocity) and
pulse (momentum) as proposed names for FPS absolute units.
Pound as force unit The
technical or
gravitational FPS system or
British gravitational system is a coherent variant of the FPS system that is most common among engineers in the United States. It takes the
pound-force as a fundamental unit of force instead of the pound as a fundamental unit of mass. In this sub-system, the unit of mass is a derived unit known as the
slug. :\mathrm{1\,slug} = \mathrm{1\,lbf{\cdot}s^2/ft}. In the context of the gravitational FPS system, the pound-force (lbf) is sometimes referred to as the pound (lb).
Pound-force as force unit and pound-mass as mass unit Another variant of the FPS system uses both the pound-mass and the pound-force, but neither the slug nor the poundal. The resulting system is sometimes also known as the
English engineering system. Despite its name, the system is based on United States customary units of measure; it is not used in England. == Other units ==