Depending on the exact route, the route is approximately 4,600 miles. Assuming 20 knots (no wind corrections) it would be just over 230 hours, of just over 9.5 days asuming you sail 24 hours a day and do not stop for supplies.
21 knots = 24.2 mph
Most modellers use a tweezers to tie the knots.
we dont know
It would depend on what type of warship and what speed they were designed for. Destroyers are capable of sailing faster than cruisers and carriers, but in peacetime they usually do not need to. Somewhere between twenty and thirty knots is probably considered flank speed in this age.
117 miles/5 knots avg= 24 hours, roughly.
Different knots for different occasions! The one i use most is the bowline, which is a loop.
The toddler frequently had knots in her shoe laces, so her mom bought her shoes with Velcro on them. Before getting up to give the speech, my stomach was in knots and my knees were wobbly. There are several types of knots used in the sport of sailing. The tree trunk had several irregular knots in it. The boat traveled 3 knots per hour which is about 3.45 miles per hour.
10.2888888 is the speed in meters per second of a ship traveling at 20 knots.
1 knot is equal to 1 nautical mile per hour. To convert knots to nautical miles, simply multiply the speed in knots by the time in hours. For example, if a boat is traveling at 10 knots for 4 hours, it would cover 40 nautical miles.
The nautical term for a unit of speed when sailing or navigating a boat is the word knots. To measure a knot it is the unit of speed equal to one nautical mile approximately 1.151 mph.
When you tie your shoes, that's a 'granny knot' Some folks make it a 'square knot'. There are probably only about twenty basic knots, but when combined, can make about 3,000 knots. I recently found an old encyclopedia of knots, published in 1944, called 'Ashley's Book of Knots' -it took Mr. Ashley 11 years to compile it! Please see the related link below for more information:
1/20 hour = 3 minutes