Centimeters to Mils (Thou) for 3D Printing

1 Centimeter equals 393.701 Mils using fixed millimeter-based 3D printing definitions.

Direct Answer

1 Centimeter equals 393.701 Mils

This conversion uses a fixed factor based on canonical reference constants.

For 0.1 Centimeter, the result equals 39.37 Mils.

Converter Calculator

393.701 Mils (Thou) (mil)

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Explanation

Formula: Mils = Centimeter × 393.701. Why: both units are normalized through millimeters, which is the most common geometric basis in slicers, CAD exports, and printer calibration workflows.

Centimeter: a 3D-printing length unit in this family that converts through one fixed millimeter normalization path.

Mils: a 3D-printing length unit in this family that converts through one fixed millimeter normalization path.

This route is useful when keeping model dimensions, tolerances, and slicing settings consistent across CAD, calibration, and printer-preparation workflows.

This conversion is purely multiplicative because both units reduce through millimeters using fixed geometric definitions with no offset.

Method & Reference

  • Method basis: exact conversion formula shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied factor: 1 Centimeter = 393.701 Mils.
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Centimeter (cm)Mils (Thou) (mil)
0.1 39.37
0.5 196.85
1 393.701
5 1,968.5
10 3,937.01
20 7,874.02
30 11,811.02

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 centimeter in mils?

1 Centimeter equals 393.701 Mils on this page.

What geometric basis does this Centimeter to Mils page use?

This route normalizes both units through millimeters, then applies the exact target-unit relationship so the direct answer, calculator, and common values table stay aligned.

When would I convert centimeter to mils?

This route is useful when keeping model dimensions, tolerances, and slicing settings consistent across CAD, calibration, and printer-preparation workflows.

How do I reverse Centimeter to Mils?

Use the mirror Mils to Centimeter route; it applies the inverse relationship with the same 3D-printing geometry assumptions.