Convert Knot to Mach (kn → Ma)
The knot equals one nautical mile per hour and is the universal speed unit for ships and aircraft worldwide.
Knot to Mach Conversion Table
10 common values| Knot | Mach |
|---|---|
| 1 kn | 0.001512 Ma |
| 5 kn | 0.007559 Ma |
| 10 kn | 0.015118 Ma |
| 25 kn | 0.037795 Ma |
| 50 kn | 0.075589 Ma |
| 100 kn | 0.151178 Ma |
| 150 kn | 0.226767 Ma |
| 200 kn | 0.302356 Ma |
| 300 kn | 0.453535 Ma |
| 500 kn | 0.755891 Ma |
How to Convert Knot to Mach Manually
Step by StepConverting knots to Mach is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in knotsStart with the number of knots (kn) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.001512The conversion factor from kn to Ma is 0.001512. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in MachThe result is your value in Mach (Ma).
Formula
Multiply the value in knots by 0.001512. For the reverse direction, multiply by 661.47085.
Ma = kn × 0.001512kn = Ma × 661.47085Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 knot = 1.852 km/h = 1.151 mph.
- Knots cannot be abbreviated "kt" in sailing — standard is "kn".
- A 40-knot wind is storm-force — 74 km/h.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Reading 40 knots as 40 km/h in weather — 74 km/h is much stronger.
- Using "knots per hour" — already a rate; it's just "knots".
- Treating knot as a distance unit — it's always a speed.
About Knot and Mach
What is the Knot?
The knot equals exactly one nautical mile per hour (1.852 km/h or 0.5144 m/s) and is the universal speed unit for ships and aircraft worldwide. The name derives from the historical practice of measuring ship speed by counting knots tied at regular intervals along a 'log line' that was let out over the stern of a ship — the number of knots that passed in a given time gave the speed. International maritime regulations, aviation flight plans, and weather reports for sailors all use knots. A typical cruise ship sails at 18–22 knots, container ships at 18–25 knots, and commercial airliners at 470–500 knots cruise speed. The knot relates to km/h (1 knot ≈ 1.852 km/h), mph (1 knot ≈ 1.151 mph), m/s (1 knot ≈ 0.514 m/s), and the nautical mile (1 knot = 1 nmi/h). Wind speeds in aviation are also given in knots.
- Ship speeds and ocean currents
- Aircraft airspeed and ground speed
- Marine weather (wind reports in knots)
Airbus A380 cruise: ~490 knots. Cruise ship: 20 knots. Sailing yacht: 6 knots typical.
What is the Mach?
Mach is a dimensionless speed ratio comparing an object's speed to the local speed of sound (about 343 m/s in air at sea level, varying with altitude and temperature). Named after Austrian physicist Ernst Mach (1838–1916), who pioneered supersonic photography, the unit became standard with high-speed aviation. Mach 1 = sound speed; Mach 2 = twice sound speed. The Concorde cruised at Mach 2.04, the SR-71 Blackbird reached Mach 3.3, and modern commercial jets cruise at Mach 0.78–0.85 (subsonic). 'Breaking the sound barrier' (first achieved by Chuck Yeager in 1947) means crossing Mach 1 in horizontal flight. Hypersonic missiles operate above Mach 5. Mach is essential in aerodynamics because shock waves, drag, and heating all depend on the relationship between vehicle speed and sound speed. At sea level: Mach 1 ≈ 1,235 km/h ≈ 767 mph ≈ 343 m/s.
- Military and supersonic-aircraft speeds
- Aerospace engineering
- Hypersonic missile specifications
Concorde: Mach 2.04. F-16 fighter: Mach 2. SR-71 Blackbird: Mach 3.3. Space re-entry: Mach 25+.