Knots

The speed of a vessel relative to the fluid in which it travels is often measured in knots.

The term comes from the practice of throwing a wooden break (chip log) behind a boat connected to a rope with knots at intervals of a little over 14 meters. The number of knots of rope released in about 30 seconds would indicate the speed of the vessel.

In still water or air, a knot is equal to a nautical mile (roughly a minute of latitude) traveled in one hour, exactly 1.852 km/h. Typical walking speed is 2 knots.

The beaufort wind force scale, developed by Sir Francis Beaufort in 1805, measured the qualitative wind effect upon sails. One hundred years later the scale was used to describe the conditions at sea, land, and trees, rather than sails.

knots km/h mph m/s
0.54 1.00 0.62 0.27
0.87 1.61 1.00 0.45
1.00 1.852 1.15 0.51
1.94 3.60 2.24 1.00
knots km/h mph m/s Beaufort number Wind description
0 0 0 0 0 Calm
1 1 1 0.3 1 Light air
4 7 4 1.6 2 Light breeze
7 12 8 3.4 3 Gentle breeze
11 20 13 5.5 4 Moderate breeze
16 30 19 8.0 5 Fresh breeze
22 40 25 10.8 6 Strong breeze
28 51 32 13.9 7 Near gale
34 63 39 17.2 8 Gale
41 76 47 20.8 9 Strong gale
48 88 55 24.5 10 Storm
56 103 64 28.5 11 Violent storm
64 120 74 32.7 12 Hurricane
knots km/h mph m/s Beaufort number Wind description

Comment (1)

  1. jtb wrote::

    Alex,

    In case you missed this delightful cartoon of the Beaufort scale: http://www.howtoons.com/toon/the-beaufort-scale/

    - j

    Monday, October 1, 2007 at 1:56 #