kN="KiloNewton" which is a measure of thrust.
Maximum thrust: 13,500 lbf (60 kN) dry thrust / 20,000 lbf (89 kN) with reheat
Thrust is measured in Kilo newtons (kN). A kilo newton is about 100kgs.
The capacity of jet engines is measured in thrust: B747-400 with 4 American Pratt & Whitney PW4000: 4x 441 kN = 1764 kN B747-400 with 4 BritishRolls-Royce RB211 4x 272kN = 1088 kN In strictly technical terms, the engines on a Boeing 747 do not deliver any actual horsepower. Horsepower is a unit of applied power and thrust is a measurement of force. The thrust numbers presented above appear correct for thrust of the engines.
70,000 lb (310 kN)
kangaroo nob
Kilowatts is not an appropriate measure for aircraft, which normally generate THRUST. The A380 generates 311-355 kN (70,000-80,000 lbf) of thrust.
KN may stand for Kilonewton (unit of force), Knot (unit of speed) or the Knudsen number (used in physics).
There is no direct correlation of thrust to horsepower. Horsepower is a measurement of "work" being performed. Thrust is simply a static measurement of force. In other words, "Thrust" and "Horsepower" measure two totally different things.
kn (both letters lowercase) is knots, which is a speed nautical miles per hour Or kN ("K" lowercase, "N" uppercase) is Kilonewtons, or a measure of force. 1 lb = .00444822162 kN.
Based on E-M Strength (120 kn) 45 KN 70 KN 90 KN 120 KN 160 KN 210 KN 320 KN etc
MG stands for milligrams in measurement.
tsp in measurement stands for teaspoon.