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Convert Miles per Hour to Knots

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Science

Speed Converter
10 sig. figures
Formula1 mph ร— 0.8689762419 = 0.8689762419 kn
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About Speed Conversions

Where you measure speed decides the unit. Roads use kilometers per hour in most countries, miles per hour in the US and UK, fixed at 1 mph = 1.609344 km/h. Aviation runs on knots, one nautical mile per hour, where 1 knot is exactly 1.852 km/h; the nautical mile maps straight onto a minute of arc of latitude, which keeps navigation math clean. The Mach number rates speed against the local speed of sound (about 340 m/s at sea level, shifting with temperature and altitude) and drives aeronautics and supersonic design. Each factor below is exact, not rounded.

Quick Conversions

Miles per HourKnots
1 mph0.868976 kn
2 mph1.73795 kn
5 mph4.34488 kn
10 mph8.68976 kn
25 mph21.7244 kn
50 mph43.4488 kn
100 mph86.8976 kn
250 mph217.244 kn
500 mph434.488 kn
1000 mph868.976 kn
Unit NameSymbolPer 1 Mile per Hour
Foot per Secondft/s1.46667
Kilometer per Hourkm/h1.60934
Knotkn0.868976
MachMa0.0013137
Meter per Secondm/s0.44704
Mile per Hourmph1

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Miles per Hour to Knots?

To convert Miles per Hour to Knots, use the conversion where 1 Mile per Hour (mph) = 0.868976 Knots (kn). For example, 1 Mile per Hour = 0.868976 Knots.

What are common Mile per Hour to Knot conversions?

Here are common conversions: 1 Miles per Hour = 0.868976 Knots, 5 Miles per Hour = 4.34488 Knots, 10 Miles per Hour = 8.68976 Knots, 25 Miles per Hour = 21.7244 Knots, 50 Miles per Hour = 43.4488 Knots, 100 Miles per Hour = 86.8976 Knots.

When would I need to convert Miles per Hour to Knots?

Speed conversions are necessary when driving in countries with different speed limit systems (mph vs km/h), in aviation where knots are standard, in physics calculations requiring meters per second, and for comparing athletic performance across different measurement standards.

How precise are the conversions?

All conversions use exact factors verified against NIST and ISO standards with up to 10 significant figures of precision. Results are calculated using IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, which provides approximately 15-17 significant digits. For temperature and other non-linear conversions, exact formulas are used rather than approximations.

Sources

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