For the Record, It's 1 kHz, Not 1000 kHz

canyonero

Member
Author
Jan 10, 2015
97
Eastern US
Tinnitus Since
7/2014
Cause of Tinnitus
Acoustic Trauma?
Tired of seeing this posted on the forum. 1000khz = 1mhz and nobody can hear that high.

When referring to audible sounds.
Correct: 1 kHz
Correct: 1000 Hz
Incorrect: 1000 kHz

__
moderator edit: fixed khz -> kHz and hz -> Hz
 
Indeed. People need to remember that kilo means thousand, so 1000 khz is actually one million hertz. No one can hear such a frequency. This reminds me when people say theyre 1.80 cm tall :D Units and prefixes are important, guys
 
Cool. So....what is that in metric?
It's the same. Frequencies are not measures in different units, so there's no metric/imperial difference here.
It think it only applies to length, area, temperature, volume and mass.

Yeah looks like I was wrong, oh well. Never could figure out why they capitalized the H.
Well, the main point you were making wasn't about capitalization. So you weren't all wrong :)
 
I always wondered about that. Thanks for clearing it up.
 

Log in or register to get the full forum benefits!

Register

Register on Tinnitus Talk for free!

Register Now