The answer depends on many factors:
550 feet.
400 ft
It depends on the conditions
Depends on the type of vehicle you are driving, road conditions, driver reaction time, etc. The average car will take 121 feet to stop after the brakes are applied. Factor in reaction time and the car will travel 265 feet before it stops.
When you come within 100 feet of an intersection or a railroad crossing, passing another vehicle is permitted.
Depends on the type of vehicle you are driving, road conditions, driver reaction time, etc. The average car will take 121 feet to stop after the brakes are applied. Factor in reaction time and the car will travel 265 feet before it stops.
Depends on the type of vehicle you are driving, road conditions, driver reaction time, etc. The average car will take 121 feet to stop after the brakes are applied. Factor in reaction time and the car will travel 265 feet before it stops.
The answer to your question depends on many many factors. Type of driving ( city or highway), vehicle size and weight, driving style, etc. There is no short answer or correct answer. The brakes wear out when they wear out.
That depends on road conditions, tire conditions, and other factors. A good rule of thumb, however, it to follow no closer than 2 seconds behind the vehicle in front of you.
1600 ft.
That depends on the fuel mileage of the vehicle you're driving which you did not list.
That question has many variables that must be known to give a 100% correct answer. (Weight or car, brake capability, surface driving on, ect.)