Pretty much all of them i say
BY AP1
With bald tires it can.
This is a very situational event. What are you driving? Are you wearing a helmet. There have been people who have rolled cars at 300 mph and lived. But there are people who have rolled cars at 30 mph and died.
70 mph daytime/ 65mph nightime 85 80 MPH (daylight hours only) 60 miles per hour daytime 60 nighttime 55 Day time 70 & Night time 65.
the cars in the 1900 have small engines. they had thin tires too. they only went like 30 mph. changes are for the better
Most cars can stop from 60 mph in about 100 feet or so. If the relationship is linear then a car should stop from 30 mph in about 50 feet.
Tornadoes travel at speeds ranging from 0 to over 70 mph. The average is 30 mph.
Just divide distance by time to get speed.30 miles / 1.5 hrs = 20 MPH
In terms of forward traveling speed most tornadoes move at 30-35 mph. However some tornadoes cam move at over 70 mph while others are stationary. Winds in a tornado can range from 65 mph to over 300 mph.
Depends. A ticket for five MPH over won't do it - a ticket for 30 MPH over could.
45mph Trick question but It's actually your going 20 mph
30 mph
30 mph!