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Why Planes and Ships Still Use Knots (Not Miles per Hour) Why Planes and Ships Still Use Knots (Not Miles per Hour) sounds like an old-fashioned detail… until you realize it’s one of the smartest safety systems humans ever kept. In Why Planes and Ships Still Use Knots (Not Miles per Hour), you’ll finally understand what a “knot” really is, where it came from, and why pilots and captains still trust it today. In this video, we time-travel back to the 1500s and the brilliant “chip log” method—wood, rope, and literal knots—built to measure speed on a rolling ocean with zero technology. Then we connect it to modern aviation and navigation, where knots still rule because they match the Earth’s coordinate system perfectly. ✅ What you’ll learn in Why Planes and Ships Still Use Knots (Not Miles per Hour): What a knot actually means (and why it’s not “just a random unit”) Why a nautical mile is based on Earth’s latitude, not road miles The simple math behind the 28-second hourglass and 47-foot spacing The “one-in-sixty rule” pilots use for fast mental navigation Why wind and ocean currents being measured in knots matters Why switching units can be dangerous (real-world mistakes prove it) How one global standard keeps air and sea travel safer worldwide By the end, when you see “480 knots” on a seatback screen, you won’t be confused—you’ll get it, and you’ll probably want to explain it at the next cookout. 👀 Quick Challenge: A plane cruises at 480 knots on a 4,700-nautical-mile trip. About how many hours will it take? Drop your answer in the comments—I’ll reply to the first 10! 🎥 At Mysteries of Simple Things, we uncover the hidden logic behind everyday things people overlook—so the world finally makes sense. 👉 Subscribe to Mysteries of Simple Things here: / @mysteriesofsimplethings 👉 If you learned something new, please Like, Comment, and Share. 👉 What topic should we break down next—altitude rules, runway numbers, or “Mach vs MPH”? AI Disclosure: This video uses AI assistance during the production process (voice/script/visuals). However, the content and ideas are 100% based on the real experiences of Mysteries of Simple Things. #Knots #NauticalMiles #AviationExplained #Navigation #Planes #Ships #MysteriesOfSimpleThings