How To Convert Mach to Knots
At standard sea level conditions (ISA), 1 Mach = 661.47 knots.
Formula: knots = Mach × 661.47
Example: Convert 1.3 Mach to knots.
1.3 × 661.47 = 859.91 kn
To convert by hand, take your Mach number and multiply it by 661.47. This works when Mach is based on the standard sea level speed of sound. If the air temperature changes, Mach 1 changes too, so the knot result will change.
Quick Answer
1 Mach = 661.47 knots (ISA sea level)
- 0.7 Mach = 463.03 kn
- 0.85 Mach = 562.25 kn
- 2.5 Mach = 1653.68 kn
Conversion Formula
Assuming ISA sea level speed of sound: knots = Mach × 661.47 More general form: knots = Mach × (speed of sound in m/s) ÷ 0.514444 where 1 knot = 0.514444 m/s (exact)
What this means: Mach is a ratio, it compares your speed to the local speed of sound. Knots are a fixed unit, they mean nautical miles per hour. If you assume a specific speed of sound, you can turn the Mach ratio into a real speed in knots.
- Pick the Mach value.
- Use the standard multiplier 661.47 if you want ISA sea level.
- Multiply and round to the precision you need.
Mach
Mach is a number that tells you how fast something moves compared to the speed of sound. The symbol is Ma.
It is named after Ernst Mach, a scientist known for work on shock waves and high speed motion. Mach numbers became widely used as aircraft and wind tunnels reached near sonic and supersonic speeds.
- Describing aircraft cruise speed like Mach 0.78.
- Talking about supersonic flight like Mach 1.2.
- Wind tunnel testing and aerodynamics research.
- Rocket and missile speed reporting.
- Comparing compressibility effects in airflow.
Knot
A knot is a speed unit equal to one nautical mile per hour. The symbol is kn.
The name comes from older ship navigation methods that used knotted ropes to estimate speed. Today, knots are standard in aviation and marine navigation because they match nautical miles and latitude based distance.
- Airspeed reporting in cockpits and flight plans.
- Marine navigation and ship speed.
- Weather reports for wind speed over water.
- ATC clearances and approach speeds.
- Navigation calculations using nautical miles.
Is this Conversion of Mach To Knots Accurate?
Yes, when the reference is clear. This page uses the ISA standard sea level speed of sound (about 340.29 m/s). With that fixed reference, 1 Mach = 661.47 kn, and the same multiplier is used in every example on this page.
In real flight, the speed of sound changes with air temperature, so Mach 1 is not always 661.47 kn. If you need high accuracy for a specific altitude and temperature, you must use the local speed of sound. For more details on our standards and references, see accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
These examples use ISA sea level, so you can see quick, consistent conversions.
- Passenger jet cruise: A typical cruise around Mach 0.78 is 0.78 × 661.47 = 515.95 kn.
- Fast business jet: Mach 0.82 is 0.82 × 661.47 = 542.41 kn, useful when comparing aircraft performance in simple terms.
- Near transonic testing: Mach 0.95 is 0.95 × 661.47 = 628.40 kn, where drag rise and control changes become important.
- Breaking the sound barrier: Mach 1.0 is 661.47 kn, the classic “sonic” reference point under standard conditions.
- Supersonic flight: Mach 1.2 is 1.2 × 661.47 = 793.76 kn, common in supersonic research and test discussions.
- Supersonic fighter dash: Mach 1.6 is 1.6 × 661.47 = 1058.35 kn, a helpful conversion when speed is reported in Mach.
- High speed missile: Mach 3 is 3 × 661.47 = 1984.41 kn, showing how quickly speeds climb at higher Mach numbers.
- Reentry or hypersonic reference: Mach 10 is 10 × 661.47 = 6614.70 kn, often used for simplified comparisons (real conditions vary a lot).
Quick Tips
- For quick work, remember Mach 1 ≈ 661.47 kn (ISA sea level).
- To estimate mentally, 0.5 Mach is about half of 661.47, which is 330.74 kn.
- Mach 0.8 is close to 0.8 × 661.47 = 529.18 kn.
- To go backward (kn to Mach), divide knots by 661.47.
- If you need real world accuracy, use local air temperature because the speed of sound changes.
- Round to 2 decimals for general use, keep more decimals for engineering.