A kilopound–force, also called kip, kip-force is a non–SI non–metric unit of force. It is equal to 1,000 pounds–force and used primarily by American architects and engineers to measure engineering loads.
kip, klb, kipf
1 kip = 4448.22 newtons (N) = 4.44822 kilonewtons (kN).
The name kip comes from combining two words: kilo
and pound
| Standard Units | |
|---|---|
| Newton | {{newton}} |
| Kilonewton | {{kilonewton}} |
| Gram-force | {{gramforce}} |
| Kilogram-force | {{kilogramforce}} |
| Ton-force | {{tonforce}} |
| Exanewton | {{exanewton}} |
| Petanewton | {{petanewton}} |
| Teranewton | {{teranewton}} |
| Giganewton | {{giganewton}} |
| Meganewton | {{meganewton}} |
| Hectonewton | {{hectonewton}} |
| Decanewton | {{decanewton}} |
| Decinewton | {{decinewton}} |
| Centinewton | {{centinewton}} |
| Millinewton | {{millinewton}} |
| Micronewton | {{micronewton}} |
| Nanonewton | {{nanonewton}} |
| Piconewton | {{piconewton}} |
| Femtonewton | {{femtonewton}} |
| Attonewton | {{attonewton}} |
| Dyne | {{dyne}} |
| Joule/meter | {{joulepermeter}} |
| Joule/centimeter | {{joulepercentimeter}} |
| Ton-force (short) | {{tonforceshort}} |
| Ton-force (long) | {{tonforcelong}} |
| Kid-force | {{kidforce}} |
| Pound-force | {{poundforce}} |
| Ounce-force | {{ounceforce}} |
| Poundal | {{poundal}} |
| Pound force/square second | {{Poundfootpersquaresecond}} |
| Pond | {{pond}} |
| Kilopond | {{kilopond}} |