30° Fahrenheit to Rankine

30°F = 489.67°R

Formula: R = F + 459.67

Fahrenheit to Rankine Converter

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How cold is 30°F?

30°F (-1.1°C) is near the freezing point of water — snow and frost are likely.

What does 30°F look like?

Near the freezing point of water — snow and frost are likely
30°F (-1.1°C) is near the freezing point of water — snow and frost are likely.

30°F on the Rankine scale

°F01020304050°R460.0470.0480.0490.0500.0

30°F = 489.7°R

How to Convert Fahrenheit to Rankine

The formula is:

R = F + 459.67

Example: 30° Fahrenheit = 489.67° Rankine

exact This conversion factor is exact by international definition.

About these units

Fahrenheit: The degree Fahrenheit (°F) is a temperature unit in the US customary system. On this scale, the freezing point of water is 32 °F and the boiling point is 212 °F — exactly 180 degrees apart. ...

Rankine: The degree Rankine (°R) is an absolute temperature scale using Fahrenheit-sized increments.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 30°F in Rankine?

30°F equals 489.67°R. The formula is: R = F + 459.67.

What does 30 degrees Fahrenheit look like in degrees Rankine?

30°F (489.67°R) is below freezing — ice and snow conditions.

How do you calculate 30°F to Rankine?

Use the formula: R = F + 459.67. Applying it: 30°F = 489.67°R.

Share This Calculation

30 degrees Fahrenheit = 489.67 degrees Rankine
30 degrees Fahrenheit = 489.67 degrees Rankine — conversion chart

Temperature conversion chart

To Fahrenheit To Celsius To Kelvin
From Fahrenheit (F) F (F - 32) × 5/9 (F - 32) × 5/9 + 273.15
From Celsius (C or o) (C × 9/5) + 32 C C + 273.15
From Kelvin (K) (K - 273.15) × 9/5 + 32 K - 273.15 K

For general conversions between Fahrenheit and Rankine, see the Fahrenheit to Rankine converter.

All unit conversions on CoolConversion use conversion factors defined or documented by internationally recognised standards bodies (such as ISO and NIST), including both SI and non-SI units.

Conversion factors verified against NIST, BIPM, ITS-90 (International Temperature Scale) Defined by the absolute thermodynamic scale (Kelvin). Last reviewed: March 2026
Tiago Fernandes Reviewed by Tiago Fernandes