Easy tips

How long does it take to travel 100 feet at 60 mph?

How long does it take to travel 100 feet at 60 mph?

To travel 100 miles, you need 100 minutes or 1 hour and 40 minutes. For speeds not as convenient as 60, time = distance divided by speed. Answer: It takes 1 hour and 40 minutes to travel 100 miles at 60 miles per hour.

How many miles per second can a vehicle travel at 30 mph?

A: Maybe a second. Q: Then you have to close in and underscore how the defendant is contradicting himself/herself; the court has taken judicial notice of how far vehicles can travel over time at given speeds. You would agree that at 30 mph a vehicle is traveling at 2 miles per minute.

What’s the average stopping distance for a car?

Stopping Distances Speed Thinking Distance 2 Possible Braking Distance Overall Stopping Distance Can Be: Comparisons 20 mph 20 feet 40 feet 60 feet 30 mph 30 feet 90 feet 120 feet 40 mph 40 feet 160 feet 200 feet 50 mph 50 feet 250 feet 300 feet (USA = Touchdown !)

How to calculate the speed of a car at sixty miles an hour?

So if you want to calculate the speed of a car at sixty miles an hour, the math is (60 x 5280) ÷ (60 x 60) = 88 feet per second. So this formula works for any “how far do you travel?”

What is the stopping distance at 60 mph?

Virtually all current production vehicles’ published road braking performance tests indicate stopping distances from 60 mph that are typically 120 to 140 feet, slightly less than half of the projected safety distances.

A: Maybe a second. Q: Then you have to close in and underscore how the defendant is contradicting himself/herself; the court has taken judicial notice of how far vehicles can travel over time at given speeds. You would agree that at 30 mph a vehicle is traveling at 2 miles per minute.

So if you want to calculate the speed of a car at sixty miles an hour, the math is (60 x 5280) ÷ (60 x 60) = 88 feet per second. So this formula works for any “how far do you travel?”

Virtually all current production vehicles’ published road braking performance tests indicate stopping distances from 60 mph that are typically 120 to 140 feet, slightly less than half of the projected safety distances.

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Ruth Doyle