Online Angle Units Converter
How to Convert from Degree [°] to Gon?

How to Convert from Degree [°] to Gon?

Learn how to easily convert angle measurements from degree [°], a common unit dividing a circle into 360 parts, into gon (gradian), which divides a circle into 400 parts. This tool assists with precise conversions for surveying, engineering, and navigation projects.

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Degree [°] to Gon Conversion Table

Degree [°] Gon

Custom Unit Conversion Table Generator – Instant Printable Conversion Tables

Enter the starting number (positive decimal or integer ≥ 0). Example: 0.1, 1, 5.
Enter the ending number (positive decimal or integer > Start Value). Example: 10, 50, 100.
Enter the step size (positive decimal > 0 and < End Value – Start Value). Example: 1.0, 2.5.
Degree [°] to Gon Conversion Table
Degree [°] Gon

What Is This Tool?

This unit converter allows users to translate angle measurements from degrees (°), which split a full circle into 360 parts, into gons (also known as gradians), dividing a circle into 400 parts. It simplifies working with metric-based angular divisions often used in surveying and engineering.

How to Use This Tool?

  • Enter the angle value in degrees [°] that you want to convert.
  • Select 'degree [°]' as the input unit and 'gon' as the output unit.
  • Click the 'Convert' button to see the equivalent angle measurement in gons.
  • Use the result for applications in surveying, military targeting, or engineering.

Key Features

  • Converts angles from degree [°] to gon (gradian).
  • Based on precise conversion formulas relevant to surveying and engineering.
  • Supports common use cases such as mapping, navigation, and construction.
  • Ideal for metric-aligned angular measurements preferred in specific technical fields.

Examples

  • Converting 30 degrees [°]: 30 × 1.1111111111 = 33.333333333 gon
  • Converting 90 degrees [°]: 90 × 1.1111111111 = 100 gon

Common Use Cases

  • Specifying geographic coordinates for maps and GPS navigation in degrees and converting to gons for metric-based tasks.
  • Artillery and military fire control to define aiming directions using gons.
  • Civil engineering projects, such as road and tunnel surveying where gons are preferred angles units.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Confirm the unit required for your specific field—degrees are widely recognized, but gons suit metric-oriented tasks.
  • Use the converter for applications in surveying, engineering, and military contexts to ensure compatibility.
  • Double-check converted values especially when precision is critical, considering decimal placement.

Limitations

  • Gon units are specialized and may not be familiar outside surveying, engineering, or military fields.
  • The conversion involves decimal values which can lead to rounding depending on decimal precision settings.
  • Degrees remain the more universal angular unit globally, limiting gon usage in general contexts.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a degree and a gon?
A degree divides a circle into 360 parts while a gon (gradian) divides it into 400 parts, with 1 gon equaling 0.9 degrees.

Why would I use gons instead of degrees?
Gons are preferred in certain fields like land surveying and engineering because their metric-based division simplifies calculations in those disciplines.

Is the degree to gon conversion exact?
The conversion uses a fixed factor where 1 degree equals approximately 1.1111111111 gons; however, precision can depend on decimal handling.

Key Terminology

Degree [°]
A unit of angle measurement equal to 1/360 of a full circle, commonly used in geometry, navigation, and engineering.
Gon (Gradian)
A unit of plane angle equal to 1/400 of a full circle, frequently used in surveying, military, and civil engineering.
Conversion Rate
The factor used to change a measurement from one unit to another; here 1 degree equals approximately 1.1111111111 gons.

Quick Knowledge Check

How many gons are in one full circle?
Which field commonly uses gons instead of degrees?
What is the conversion factor from degrees to gons?