it has sensors either on the wheel hub or in the transmission to check for distance traveled while in drive
Under no sircumstanses should a car be droven with a broken shock because it will simple fold in half after mere seconds.
I need to know if this car has been in an accident
You would also need to know how many gallons your car uses per mile, or how many miles per gallon.You would also need to know how many gallons your car uses per mile, or how many miles per gallon.You would also need to know how many gallons your car uses per mile, or how many miles per gallon.You would also need to know how many gallons your car uses per mile, or how many miles per gallon.
a mile judges how fast a car or truck goes and a know judges how fast a plane or boat goes
Your question can not be answered as asked. There is not information available online for mile, mile. For a car to be considered a classic car, it has to be at least 25 years old.
It varies depending upon profession. I know for government jobs, it was .58/mile. Recently, I believe it was reduced to .52/mile.
You can watch a 500 mile car race in Indiana.
It is any car that can travel 1/4 mile from a dead stop in under 11 seconds. A car that can run this 1/4 mile distance in 10.99 seconds or less is a 10 second car. There are almost no production cars sold to the general public that can do this or none I know of.
This answer would depend on your driving speed. There is 1.61 kms in a mile, so if you know your speed per mile or km, you can calculate it. Google it!
You dont need to know, you will never be able to get this car anyways! The US Air Force has a jet car that can outrun a Mig-17 (for a quarter mile). Seen it. It was great!
To calculate the gallons of gas used, you can use the formula: gallons used = distance driven (miles) / miles per gallon (MPG). For a car that gets 26 MPG driven a half mile, the calculation would be 0.5 miles ÷ 26 MPG, which equals approximately 0.0192 gallons. Therefore, about 0.0192 gallons of gas have been used for that half-mile drive.
F4 and F5 tornadoes have been known to throw cars more than a hundred yards and carry them more than half a mile.