Turns to Milliradians Converter
Enter a value to instantly convert between angle units.
1 Turn = 6283.1853 Milliradian
Key Formulas
Degree → Radian
rad = ° × 0.0174533Radian → Degree
° = rad × 57.2958Degree → Gradian
grad = ° × 1.11111Gradian → Degree
° = grad × 0.9Formula
milliradians = turns × 6,283.185307Game engines think in fractional turns (0.25 = quarter-spin), while sniper scopes, laser rangefinders, and ballistics calculators use milliradians because of the 1-mrad/1-meter rule: at 1,000 meters, 1 milliradian subtends exactly 1 meter. Optical systems, drone autopilots, and precision robotics also prefer milliradians for their mathematical elegance — one full turn = 2π radians = 6,283.185 milliradians exactly. When a game integrates tactical ballistics or when a robot arm's joint angle (in turns) must be expressed for optical alignment, this conversion bridges the two domains.
Source: ISO 80000-3:2019 (Quantities and units — Space and time)
Last reviewed: · see our methodology
Frequently Asked Questions
Real-World Examples
A drone's gimbal rotates a quarter-turn (90°) to face downward. In milliradians, this is 1,571 mrad, used to calculate the field of view at the ground distance using the 1-mrad/1-meter rule.
0.25 tr = 1570.796 mrad
A laser targeting system performs a half-turn (180°) scan from north to south. The 3,141.6 milliradian swing is expressed in the system's ballistic solver to compute correction factors for wind drift.
0.5 tr = 3141.593 mrad
A camera gimbal completes one full turn during a calibration sweep. At exactly 6,283.185 milliradians, this rotation verifies that the motor has 2π radians of authority — standard for 360° panning.
1 tr = 6283.185 mrad
A precision robotic telescope adjusts aim by 10 milliradians (0.573°) to track a high-altitude satellite. This tiny turn is computable from ballistic tables: at 400 km altitude, 10 mrad subtends roughly 4 km of drift.
0.001592 tr = 10 mrad