Why They're Called Knots

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • ☠️ See if we died! • We don't want to DIE s...
    Boats use knots instead of MPH. I mean, usually. While sailing the bahamas in a 47' Vagabond sailboat, we hit speeds up to 8 MPH. Do you know how fast that is in knots??!! I'll tell you! And give you the fascinating history of how sailors calculated speed back when I was a kid in the 1600's.
    #sailing #boats #shorts
    Why They're Called Knots
    • Why They're Called Kno...
    photo credit: By Lokilech - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikime...

Komentáře • 683

  • @LyfeUntethered
    @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +418

    ☠️ See if we died! czcams.com/video/ERZZe8F01MY/video.html

    • @steventhepig3173
      @steventhepig3173 Před rokem +7

      😂

    • @MaoZedong2225
      @MaoZedong2225 Před rokem +19

      I know you didn't die even without watching the video

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +26

      @@MaoZedong2225 How can you be sure? AI is getting really good!

    • @MaoZedong2225
      @MaoZedong2225 Před rokem +4

      @@LyfeUntethered so am i now talking to AI connected to your CZcams account?

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +17

      @@MaoZedong2225 It’s impossible to know for certain.

  • @jacktimber
    @jacktimber Před rokem +5902

    It’s crazy how going over water makes you feel like your going faster.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +403

      It TOTALLY does. 8 knots and you're FLYING!

    • @Bierdaddy1
      @Bierdaddy1 Před rokem +167

      It’s because you can see the water surface next to you pass by without anything obstructing your view, like walking or on a bicycle. However, higher up In an suvs or a bus, the doors/sides block the view of the ground next to us. What we see is farther away making it look like we’re moving slower than we are. How about looking out the window of an airplane at take off vs seemingly crawling from altitude? Have you ever looked at the ground while riding a motorcycle on the highway? 😳 So yah, 6 knots in a sailboat or 26 kn in a speedboat is fast! Don’t fall out! 😆

    • @philippebakker9836
      @philippebakker9836 Před rokem +6

      Depends which boat you are on but sure

    • @ae3qe27u3
      @ae3qe27u3 Před rokem +17

      Also, Michael Phelps swims at around 4mph... which is an especially brisk walk. We aren't made for the water, so everything feels faster.

    • @yammmit
      @yammmit Před rokem +4

      you’re

  • @jamesmarks8099
    @jamesmarks8099 Před rokem +2990

    Let's take a mile which is already not a great unit and divide it into 120 parts cause why not, and then we're going to time it by using 28 seconds as a standard... knots also known as potatoes per bananas.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +265

      Lol. It's more than I would have every figured out! I'd be like "We should go faster...."

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 Před rokem +395

      Wrong.Nautical miles are actually the least nonsensical of old units,because they are equivalent to 1 minute of latitude.

    • @theporcupine9993
      @theporcupine9993 Před rokem +100

      ​@@naamadossantossilva47361 minute of latitude... So 1/60 of a degree which is 1/360 of the earth's circumference. Yeah buddy you don't understand the convenience of metric if you think that's an argument for it being easy

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 Před rokem +278

      @@theporcupine9993 It's not about being easy,it's about usefulness for navigation.

    • @theletterh8176
      @theletterh8176 Před rokem +206

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@theporcupine9993yeah..that's much simpler for navigation. it is far easier to make distance calculations with a nautical mile since those use the earth's curvature, and the nautical mile is the standard across the world for marine distance. the nautical mile isn't imperial - in fact it's defined in metric as well

  • @Erik_91
    @Erik_91 Před rokem +490

    We still call it knots... The good old days of today

    • @anonymousfuck9320
      @anonymousfuck9320 Před rokem +15

      Yeah, we use it in the air aswell so

    • @set7938
      @set7938 Před rokem

      1 knot equals around 2km. So much easier to understand

    • @pongangelo2048
      @pongangelo2048 Před rokem +5

      The good ol'days requires some chained "volunteers" underneath the ship to paddle it.
      Too bad, this generation criminalized it. 😢

    • @Cosmo054
      @Cosmo054 Před rokem

      @@pongangelo2048Yea, what a shame we abolished slavery

    • @crystallize4940
      @crystallize4940 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@set7938knot is speed not distance

  • @ewathoughts8476
    @ewathoughts8476 Před rokem +8

    Knots is short for Nautical Mile per hour. A Nautical mile is a minute if arc on the worlds circumference, thus the navigators saying that a minute is as good as a mile. Worldwide navigation is done using degrees, minutes, and seconds (can also be degrees and decimal fractions of degrees) thus the unit of distance is measured using knots since the relationship between minutes and nautical mile is 1:1.

  • @namenotavailable7365
    @namenotavailable7365 Před rokem +274

    Knots by Hourglass. The Days of Their Lives.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +14

      ahh, the good 'ol days... when we watched the hourglass instead of CZcams...

    • @ExhiledGod2
      @ExhiledGod2 Před rokem +1

      So ends the days of our lives.
      Remember when my mother told me about this show, characters apparently just keep on going or something

    • @terrysmith7229
      @terrysmith7229 Před 8 měsíci

      Never knew why.

  • @da207kid4
    @da207kid4 Před rokem +676

    Is that the blind surfer narrating your short? 😂😂😂😂

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +103

      Guess i need to look him up! He must sound AMAZING!

    • @Daniel-fu1me
      @Daniel-fu1me Před rokem +50

      @@LyfeUntetheredhe was a voice actor for many things and yes, you do sound like him

    • @theblayz56
      @theblayz56 Před rokem +20

      @@LyfeUntetheredthe legendary Pete Gustin

    • @Ansset0
      @Ansset0 Před rokem

      Mangled ape, after suffering a serious stroke.

    • @Oscar4u69
      @Oscar4u69 Před rokem +1

      ​@@Ansset0
      what?

  • @kaneoctaivian2047
    @kaneoctaivian2047 Před rokem +12

    They would also to measure speed throw a log off the boat at the bow and time how long it takes to get to the stern. Thus the logbook was named

  • @cjvan713
    @cjvan713 Před rokem +190

    They would also put this measurement in what they called, a logbook.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +9

      💯

    • @LIZZIE-lizzie
      @LIZZIE-lizzie Před rokem +3

      That and many other "things". Anything not totally personal went in that log - only Captains were allowed to bring their wives, so that went down, too 😅

    • @promontorium
      @promontorium Před rokem +1

      ​@@LIZZIE-lizzieOK but you're missing the significance here. I'll make my own post on it... The word log as a verb is directly from this physical piece of wood

    • @valmikabeneteau7229
      @valmikabeneteau7229 Před 9 měsíci

      And it's a log book because it is made from logs?

    • @crazydutchbloke
      @crazydutchbloke Před 5 měsíci

      Yes the log book paper is made from logs, And those come from trees.Trees need carbon dioxide to grow, and thats produced by modern ships.@@valmikabeneteau7229

  • @williamkjellman8874
    @williamkjellman8874 Před rokem +48

    As i sailor my self, we still use knots for measuring because the nautic system hase been based on that since it’s beginning. So my question is why do you use mph instead of knots?
    Great video explaining how the nautical miles system works tho👍😊

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +8

      It's not my boat. I tried to change it to knots, but couldn't figure it out! You think it would be like 1 obvious button! I was kinda embarassed to show MPH in the video!

    • @filippo7284
      @filippo7284 Před rokem

      Maybe MPH refers to Nautical miles per hour = knots

    • @collinwood6573
      @collinwood6573 Před rokem +2

      @@filippo7284Knots uses the symbol kts (sometimes just kt or even kn). MPH is the standard for miles per hour so using it for knots wouldn’t make any sense.

    • @einflinkeswiesel2695
      @einflinkeswiesel2695 Před rokem

      @@filippo7284 but miles and nautical miles are not the same

    • @Hgdhgfdssxvbbnjoo
      @Hgdhgfdssxvbbnjoo Před 5 měsíci

      @@filippo7284mph is always statute miles.

  • @aaronmcclain585
    @aaronmcclain585 Před rokem +120

    The cliff hanger at the end....😮😂
    You got yourself another subscriber for the humor

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +4

      Haha thanks! Spoiler: not dead! 🤣☠️

    • @tobybeggs8676
      @tobybeggs8676 Před rokem +3

      @@LyfeUntetheredhe does lol, you reminded me of him too

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +3

      @@tobybeggs8676 The Blind surfer? Looked him up! He sounds great! I used to do voiceover back in the day.. (old channel: czcams.com/users/trevorjonesvo)

  • @Human000001
    @Human000001 Před rokem +2

    They also write it down in a book to keep track of how fast they've been going. This method of measuring your speed gave the book it's name. We even use the same name today for the book, but for keeping track of varius different things. You've probably heard of a "logbook". Probably related to term if "logging in" as well.

  • @auroria117
    @auroria117 Před rokem +26

    Gotta love a good knot

  • @gino14
    @gino14 Před 5 měsíci +1

    The name of the log also spread to the book that these speed measurements were written in.
    ...Hence, when we need to record things, that record is called a log.

  • @Koopsas
    @Koopsas Před rokem +6

    Interestingly enough they still used this sort of technique not to long ago. Skipper used to lay telecom cable and running 20x the length of the vessel in piano wire of the back of the ship gave them a much more precise idea of how fast they were moving, especially when they had to know that number with little tolerance for error.

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci

      Interesting, since he lays cable on(in) the ground, I would think his SOG Speed over ground would be more useful than through water.

  • @meeep9099
    @meeep9099 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for all the work you do keeping us up to date in these tumultuous times.

  • @TommieTheCommie
    @TommieTheCommie Před rokem +1

    The most advanced math anyone would use outside of school in a practical application

  • @Trinayraj
    @Trinayraj Před rokem +4

    "Watch this video to see if we died "
    Cmmon dude , you had a camera and we all know the saying about cameramen !

  • @DJThe240Guy
    @DJThe240Guy Před rokem +2

    Learned about this when i was on a sail boat for 4 days for school day and night putting up the sail and going to our sailing stations was fun

  • @w9shcl0thes
    @w9shcl0thes Před rokem +5

    That is some blue ass water.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Ya, I’d never seen anything line it.

    • @jamie.goodson
      @jamie.goodson Před rokem +1

      @@LyfeUntethered Was that a log line pun? lol

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      Ha, I wish. Just can't freaking see tiny letters. Or type, apparenlty @@jamie.goodson

  • @drewsmith4317
    @drewsmith4317 Před rokem +1

    Interesting fact to add on. They would take those speeds and put them in a book. They called it the log book and that is why we now log into accounts.

  • @veemann3158
    @veemann3158 Před rokem +4

    No true sailor would have their KNOTmeter set to anything other than knots. Why? Nautical miles. All marine charts, in fact all maps are in nautical miles. One minute of latitude is one nautical mile, one degree of latitude is 60 nautical mile, so to calculate position on a nautical chart, measured in degrees and minutes of latitude and longitude, via dead reckoning (course, speed, time) it's particularly important to know your speed in knots to be able to calculate, with any measure of accuracy. Knots, or nautical miles per hour, are used because they correspond to nautical charts, and prior to the advent of electronic navigation, and as an important skill in the event of any kind of device failure, allows a mariner to calculate where on earth they are. That is why no true sailor would ever have their knotmeter set to read in anything other than knots.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      Absolutely. I was embarrassed it was set to MPH. Not my boat. Tried to set to knots but it’s either broken or just not intuitive. On a plane back to boat now. Will try again! With Google if needed!

  • @thefalsekingslayer3717
    @thefalsekingslayer3717 Před rokem +1

    When sailors had to have freaking PHDs is Mathematica

  • @randomd8266
    @randomd8266 Před rokem +2

    Amazing, transforming an outdated measure to bald eagles per glazed donut

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      LOL. But this is why we still use knots (besides to eat more donuts, which I encourage) - czcams.com/users/shorts0hxq8C4tDso

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci

      Nope, it is the one US unit that actually makes sense. (as you portray)

  • @3AM.Paranormal
    @3AM.Paranormal Před rokem +10

    For the longest time I wondered how fast was a knot and what was a nautical mile in comparison to a mi/km. Ty! ❤

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      Glad to help!

    • @rcpmac
      @rcpmac Před rokem +3

      Cuz you don’t know how to search the internet?

    • @jackster2568
      @jackster2568 Před rokem

      Because it would be far harder to actually research this topic than to just happen onto a video by chance

  • @fromthegods78
    @fromthegods78 Před rokem +1

    Funny thing is, the most advanced aircraft in the world today still use Knots

  • @StarWave2
    @StarWave2 Před rokem +2

    Love sailing

  • @C0ochieMeat
    @C0ochieMeat Před rokem +1

    I always thought “knots” was just slang for “nautical miles” that’s really cool that there’s an actual method to it!

  • @arkadybron1994
    @arkadybron1994 Před 5 měsíci +1

    It was a ships log not chip log and it was called a log because that's what it was. A wooden log tied to a long piece of thin rope that had knots tied in it a intervals. You dropped the log over the side and counted the knots payed out in a given amount of time, which gave you your speed through the water.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před 5 měsíci

      There seem to be differing opinions on that, but I wasn't there, so I can only go by, you know, what google tells me! Thanks for the info.

  • @c2sartinkprinthub757
    @c2sartinkprinthub757 Před rokem +1

    "and the triangle would kinda hold that in place" jaja so mysterious

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Ya, they did the best they could with what they had!

  • @frostgd8040
    @frostgd8040 Před rokem +1

    Knots are still widely used today! Not just on the sea but also in aviation.

  • @crazydutchbloke
    @crazydutchbloke Před 5 měsíci

    Its still knots. Its why a Nautical Mile is longer then a Land Mile. Its still used today, in case of a navigation blackout.

  • @1zanglang
    @1zanglang Před 11 měsíci

    There is another method involving two sailors, a piece of wood a whistle and a chronometer. First sailor stays at the bow and holds the piece of wood. The other is at stern and has the whistle and the chrono. When he whistle, and starts the chrono, the bow sailor throws the wood abeam in water. When the stern pass the piece of wood floating on water, the stern sailor stops the chrono. Knowing the ship lenght, or more precisely, the distance between the two sailors, it is extremely simple to calculate speed.

  • @thatsrtkid
    @thatsrtkid Před 10 měsíci +1

    For the record we use this in aviation, and nobody for sure knows why. Legend has is Chris Columbus was flying through the sky in his ship and the only thing he had on board was the good ole log. Chris Columbus was never a pilot. We do not like knots. Keep knots in the water.

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci

      So, you really never really grasped the correlation between Nm's and degrees or minutes?
      This might just be the very valid reason aviation embraced the Nm...

  • @ShockwaveTheLogical
    @ShockwaveTheLogical Před rokem +4

    Pretty sure most vessels still use knots. Could be wrong though.
    As in the unit not the physical rope thing

  • @Lucas-fo8ci
    @Lucas-fo8ci Před 8 měsíci

    Fun fact, the term "log book" come from writing their speed using the log line

  • @jiaqili6997
    @jiaqili6997 Před rokem +2

    Question: why sailors still use old day speed units instead of traditional km/h or miles/ hours nowadays?

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +3

      It is = to 1 minute of longitude on a map, or 1/60th of a degree.

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci +1

      A nautical mile is about the only one US unit that has a solid base, is logical and is critical when navigating.
      (as explained)

  • @lextheap1638
    @lextheap1638 Před rokem +1

    1 Nauitical mile is also 1/60th of a degree of the Earths circumference at the equator

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci

      Yep, and every meridian (latitude).

  • @soulfishertoo
    @soulfishertoo Před rokem +2

    Cool. Love everything boating. Good trivia to know. Useless but interesting.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Useless but intersting! 😂 Thanks for watching! #themoreyouknow

    • @promontorium
      @promontorium Před rokem +1

      That's what the word trivia means. A plural derivation of trivial. How's that for trivia?
      One more, I'm spamming the better trivia not mentioned. The log readings from those days of knots were kept in "log books". Log referring to the piece of wood they threw overboard. The use of "log book" eventually became more generic as more information was recorded...jump forward some centuries...you LOG into an account online because knots were tied into a rope attached to a LOG. Direct etymological connection.

  • @marten3451
    @marten3451 Před rokem +1

    I use gps but sometimes i like using old fashioned methods, as backup

  • @stephenparker2131
    @stephenparker2131 Před rokem +1

    And commercial fishermen in Australia still use knotes and measure the notes the same way if el electronics fail

  • @mr.tophat6592
    @mr.tophat6592 Před rokem +1

    Thats the most intresting way of measuring speed I have ever heard of

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      You know, if someone didn't figure it out for me, I'd never know how fast I was going! 😂 Glad there were math wizards 300 years ago to figure this stuff out!

  • @NowStopandThink
    @NowStopandThink Před 7 měsíci

    Didn't know that history, thanks!

  • @alexfrideres1198
    @alexfrideres1198 Před rokem +1

    The book they wrote the speed in was called the “log book”

  • @toxico1152
    @toxico1152 Před rokem +2

    Oooooooh knots. Nautical

  • @T---T
    @T---T Před rokem +1

    ...And that is how we got the word "logbook"

  • @user-do5bl5qz3q
    @user-do5bl5qz3q Před 9 měsíci

    So really useful info that I need to know

  • @ugandalorian495
    @ugandalorian495 Před rokem +1

    This video perfectly explained what I’ve been curious about

  • @tianos9724
    @tianos9724 Před rokem +2

    1/120th of a nautical mile (1852 metres) is about 15.4 metres, not 14.4 metres.

  • @MarkTubeG
    @MarkTubeG Před 7 měsíci

    For no reason, I've always assumed that "knots" was somehow short for "nautical." Nope. Knots was short for knots! Thx!

  • @__OZYMANDIAS__
    @__OZYMANDIAS__ Před rokem +2

    I stayed on a schooner and learned how to use a chip log, never thought I’d ever hear that term again

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 Před rokem

      Did you use a 30 sec hourglass?

    • @__OZYMANDIAS__
      @__OZYMANDIAS__ Před rokem

      @@oldmech619 I can’t remember if we did but I don’t think so, I think we used a pre set mark on the line

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 Před rokem

      @@__OZYMANDIAS__ I presume you learned how to navigate with a sexton. Electronics fail. Besides, sextons are fun!

    • @__OZYMANDIAS__
      @__OZYMANDIAS__ Před rokem

      @@oldmech619 no unless they called it so other than that, it was the zodiac schooner with my class last year on a school “9th grade right of passage trip” so it was more learning about how to coil ropes, man the ship and pilot it ect, not much navigation stuff thought

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 Před rokem

      @@__OZYMANDIAS__ The Zodiac is one of the most iconic schooner afloat. As a kid, I saw an adventurous movie were a schooner was sailing cargo to the small South Pacific islands. Ahhh, the dreams of the young. And you got to live it. I did have 32ft Islander. Nice boat.

  • @lukedodge7387
    @lukedodge7387 Před rokem +1

    Next video idea: Land Nav and do 'clicks' i learned it but have since forgotten
    Love the history

  • @skmgeek
    @skmgeek Před rokem +8

    As a furry I can confirm that I also measure knots :3

  • @jackpfefferkorn3734
    @jackpfefferkorn3734 Před rokem +1

    So, is it just a coincidence that Knots sounds like a shortening of Nautical miles?

  • @RustyRedRhombus
    @RustyRedRhombus Před rokem +1

    And they recorded those chip log speeds in a logbook!

  • @InYourDreams-Andia
    @InYourDreams-Andia Před rokem +1

    I never knew! Subbed. And a 28sec hr glass. This was the constant standard back then?

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      Dude, I'm not sure! Others have brought that up and now I have more qustions! Thanks!

  • @bewell-7743
    @bewell-7743 Před rokem

    How cool is that... 👍🏻🏴‍☠️

  • @promontorium
    @promontorium Před rokem +2

    This story is told often around sailing. What is far more universal and never told is the "log book" where the speed in knots was written is not a coincidence, it's directly where the verb "to log" and the adjective "logging" (as in writing down/recording) came from. From a piece of wood ---> log on to a computer/ website. This is where it came from.

  • @isaacbear7115
    @isaacbear7115 Před rokem +4

    I use knots for personal enjoyment uwu

  • @tenpiloto
    @tenpiloto Před rokem +3

    A nautical mile is exactly one minute of latitude.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      BAM! I wanted to put that in, but ran out of... minutes to explain it!

  • @SquooshyCatboy
    @SquooshyCatboy Před rokem +6

    No wonder furries love sailing so much

  • @MrMuhittin
    @MrMuhittin Před rokem +3

    This is absolutely knots dude!!!

  • @trulsdirio
    @trulsdirio Před rokem +1

    They really said powers of 10 are lava

  • @Unotch
    @Unotch Před 6 měsíci +1

    How fast are we going? Theeze nutz!

  • @LIZZIE-lizzie
    @LIZZIE-lizzie Před rokem +1

    GREAT INFORMATION ‼️‼️‼️

  • @its_whack
    @its_whack Před rokem +2

    What are these measurements. 14.4. 28 seconds absoulty wild

  • @thembelaiiv9694
    @thembelaiiv9694 Před rokem

    So informative

  • @JAVTROOPER
    @JAVTROOPER Před rokem +2

    That last line just like some old 90s movies trailer 😂😂😂

  • @jbird73
    @jbird73 Před rokem +1

    That's pretty cool. I never knew that.

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 Před 11 měsíci

    there's also a longer calculation, but the captain needs to know a few things about his vessel...
    Throw a piece of toast or wood or something from a known spot in the from of the boat and time how long it takes to get to a particular spot the back. Then it's just a matter of paying the math bill for the month.

  • @nicholascarew6511
    @nicholascarew6511 Před rokem +2

    We still use knots

  • @gamingmoran9597
    @gamingmoran9597 Před rokem +1

    Just because he said see if we died I'm sdescribin

  • @kevinlau9018
    @kevinlau9018 Před rokem

    Bars so fire he went behind them

  • @marcel13091975
    @marcel13091975 Před rokem +3

    At first I thought he said: "they use their nuts to measure speed"

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      I do. It chafes, but nothing a good lotion can't fix.

  • @wettexan
    @wettexan Před rokem +1

    Actually called a "taffrail" log, still thanks for sharing.

  • @Archive99201
    @Archive99201 Před rokem

    Skilled sailors could just tell how many knots they were going like us with cars

  • @SaintMcFoye
    @SaintMcFoye Před 9 měsíci

    Tried this in my truck.
    Now they call me
    "Old Three Finger Joe"...

  • @007dhaval
    @007dhaval Před rokem +1

    Subscribed

  • @ClintonTv1032
    @ClintonTv1032 Před rokem +1

    "Watch this video to see if we died".Wtf! Like....😱🤐🤣🤣

  • @lemmonlizard4810
    @lemmonlizard4810 Před rokem +1

    Going 10 mph on the ocean feels like 90 on the freeway

  • @Jason-rn4jk
    @Jason-rn4jk Před rokem +1

    Considering there was no standard for the triangle pieces size or weight, or the thickness of the rope, or the size of the hourglass…..there’s so many wrongs with this unit of measure it’s mind boggling it ever caught on.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      thus "estimate" 😂

    • @Arnaud58
      @Arnaud58 Před 9 měsíci

      And that is exactly why those early seafarers deserve more respect for their achievements.

  • @billhart9832
    @billhart9832 Před rokem +1

    Still struggling with the metric system. 1 Nautical mile is 1,852 meters so 1/120th is 15.433 meters

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Ya. Me too.

    • @madbrowndog4887
      @madbrowndog4887 Před rokem

      Damn, you're right! Now I'll have to recalibrate the logline I just made, by moving each knot 1.033 metres to the left. Or is it to the right. Might depend which hemisphere you are in.

    • @billhart9832
      @billhart9832 Před rokem

      @@madbrowndog4887, Nearly 50 years ago the USA passed a "metrification" law, but it was an unfunded mandate so there was no enforcement. However I committed at the time to memorize most of the conversions, a lesson that has since served me well working internationally for the last 24 years, especially as I'm and Instrumentation and control systems engineer and units of measure are my life. In any event the sad bulk of Americans are saddled with dual lablings on most items with the only industry that made "hard conversions" being alcoholic spirits and wine. A 1/2 pint became a slightly smaller 200ml. A pint, a slightly larger 500ml. Liters slightly larger than the quarts they supplanted.
      The one nearly identical conversion was the infamous "Fifth" or 4/5ths of a quart, which is almost exactly the 750ml. You find today. However, marketing being what it is you may now find that "Fifth" downsized to 700 ml. Pardon my wayward detour down the path of "Potent Potables" from Jeopardy. I wish you fair winds and following seas, carefully calculating your knots!

  • @artemia79
    @artemia79 Před rokem

    I just learned this but thought it was cool. 1 knot means that you are traveling 100 feet in one minute. So compared to mph... 1 mile per hour is equal to 5280 feet. If you averaged 1 knot over an hour you would travel 6000 feet.

  • @ericschweizer1274
    @ericschweizer1274 Před rokem +1

    Of course confusing af!

  • @cockatoo010
    @cockatoo010 Před rokem +1

    And since that's what they used in the olden days, they still used them into the modern era, at which time they got passed onto aeronautics
    So now we have planes going 600knots gs

  • @SimonDman
    @SimonDman Před rokem +1

    Ships Still Use Knots Today.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Absolutely! They just don't use chip logs to figure it out anymore!

  • @glennwalker-or2qr
    @glennwalker-or2qr Před 9 měsíci

    Wow....thanks for sharing.......👍👍

  • @whitsundayrealestate_
    @whitsundayrealestate_ Před 6 měsíci

    I still use knots. I understand the ease of km/h but it's not a standard km so knots make sense.

  • @CaptainRon1913
    @CaptainRon1913 Před 7 měsíci

    Nice dock gouge on the side of the boat

  • @BxCortez2050
    @BxCortez2050 Před rokem

    It's amazing how they sailed all ova the world and no tech

  • @damianalbury9583
    @damianalbury9583 Před 11 měsíci

    Where did u guys take this video?

  • @aleksandaradamovic3849
    @aleksandaradamovic3849 Před rokem +2

    Hamburgers per freedom

  • @moho2536
    @moho2536 Před rokem

    Where is this place?

  • @Trenz0
    @Trenz0 Před rokem +1

    Okay, so I always thought it was something about knots. Then i realized it was probably supposed to be "nauts" as in nautical miles per hour. Now I dont know what to think

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem +1

      It's the knots they tied in the line. But yes, sounds like nautical.

  • @wellwhynotthen2805
    @wellwhynotthen2805 Před rokem

    6 yrs in the navy 4 deployments and more miles of ocean crossed than i could count still never once asked why they called it knots. Now i know.

  • @bobbysmalls3857
    @bobbysmalls3857 Před rokem

    Internally screaming eternally

  • @michaelmitchell6185
    @michaelmitchell6185 Před rokem +2

    damn...sounds exhausting

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Před rokem

      Ya. We’re kinda spoiled today. Was just talking to my daughter is we sit here at home with a power outage!

  • @j.dragon651
    @j.dragon651 Před rokem +1

    Now they are measured in Knot Seas.

  • @brunovazquez1
    @brunovazquez1 Před rokem +1

    So that’s why they’re called knots lol

  • @saptarshibhuyan9798
    @saptarshibhuyan9798 Před rokem +1

    Sailors still use knots! Even pilots, bcs 1 knot is 1 nautical mile per hr. Easier to calculate