An airplane's range is determined by it's groundspeed, fuel burn rate, and fuel capacity. If an airplane burns 10 gallons of fuel per hour and has a ground speed of 200 miles per hour, with a 40 gallon fuel tank. It could fly about 800 miles. You have to keep some fuel in reserve. At least 30 minutes of fuel for daytime, and 45 minutes at night.
The blackbird can go about 2,500 miles without refuelling! Thats about 4023.4km
That depends - on how many miles to the gallon it does - and the size of the fuel tank! These days many can travel over 300 miles without refueling.
That's really going to have something to do with how fast the plane is flying. If the plane is a Boeing 737 covering ground at 400 mph, then (6,751 / 400) = 16.88 hours of flying time, not counting refueling stops. If the plane is a Cessna 172 covering ground at 120 mph, then (6,751 / 120) = 56.26 hours of flying time, not counting refueling and pit stops.
With an amphibious car.... 145 miles plus 7000 miles of ocean plus 337 miles, not counting refueling.
Commercial jets can fly as much as 16,600 kilometers without refueling. That is, about a 19 hour long flight.
680 Miles :)
109 miles by plane.
1,350 miles
The maximum range for the British Airways Concorde is 4,488.04 miles (or 3,900 nmi / 7,222.8 km)
11390 miles (18331 km)
Approximately 2500 miles.
316 miles by plane. 611 miles by car.