What Does Kip Mean in Measurements?

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A kip is a unit of weight equivalent to 1,000 pounds or 455 kilograms. In the context of a concrete column with a diameter of 350mm and a length of 2m, the calculated weight is 1.04 kip. There is confusion regarding the use of "kip" for expressing weight in a problem that requests the answer in pounds. Participants express concern over the use of metric prefixes with imperial units, considering it an unusual notation. This discussion highlights the importance of clarity in measurement units.
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1.A concrete column has a diameter of 350mm and a length of 2m. If the density (mass/volume) of concrete is 2.45\frac{Mg}{m^3} determine the weight of the column in pounds

The answer is given as 1.04 kip: What is or what unit of measure is a kip?
 
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Mesmer said:
1.A concrete column has a diameter of 350mm and a length of 2m. If the density (mass/volume) of concrete is 2.45{Mg}_{m^3} determine the weight of the column in pounds

The answer is given as 1.04 kip: What is or what unit of measure is a kip?

This should come in handy: http://www.physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP811/appenB8.html".
 
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A google search tells me: A kip is "A unit of weight equal to 1,000 pounds (455 kilograms)" http://www.answers.com/topic/kip

Edit: radou beat me to it!
 
Thank you I was editing my post and you answered it!
 
Mesmer said:
1.A concrete column has a diameter of 350mm and a length of 2m. If the density (mass/volume) of concrete is 2.45\frac{Mg}{m^3} determine the weight of the column in pounds

The answer is given as 1.04 kip: What is or what unit of measure is a kip?
The problem says "determine the weight of the column in pounds" and then gives the answer in kip?
 
Apparently, "kip" means "kilo-pound." I consider the whole thing to be an egregious abuse of notation.

- Warren
 
chroot said:
Apparently, "kip" means "kilo-pound." I consider the whole thing to be an egregious abuse of notation.

- Warren

I agree, I wasn't aware that metric prefixes were used with imperial units. I've never seen this before!
 
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