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No, but they are both on I-77.
Your screen might be covered.
Fairfax VA to Atlanta cost nothing... I95 through Richmond VA get on I85 south til you hit Atlanta.. Happy travels..Speed safe..lol
Driving from Raleigh, NC to Columbia, SC is about a 3.5 hour drive. I recently moved to Raleigh from Columbia and after all the trips back and forth. You can go 2 ways to get there which I prefer to take I40 to I95S to I20W to Columbia, it's more scenic or you can go I85 towards Charlotte and pick up I77 to Columbia. Your pick they are both the same distance but there is more construction on the I85 alternative. I have done the trip in 2.5 hours on both routes as well, so it depends on the circumstances.
No - Greensboro is North EAST of Charlotte. I85 runs from Charlotte to Grensboro and runs roughly Northeast as you travel from Charlotte to Greensboro although there are stretches that are pretty much North, East, and East-Northeast along the way.
Distance divided by speed = time 100 Miles divided by 60 mph equals 1hour 40 minutes
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There shouldn't be any tolls. If you take I75 straight down to I40, you can cut across I40 and where you go from there depends on where in SC you're going... you can take I26, I85, I77, or I95 into SC, plus several state and US highways.
Well, south and west is probably the answer you're looking for. It would really depend on what part of Texas you were going to. You could just take I40 west and run into northern Texas, or you could take I85 south to I20 west and go into central Texas, for example.
It would be somewhere in the Richmond area. All you have to do at Smithfield is jump on I95 and head north... if you were in Garner or Clayton or Raleigh, then it would be more efficient to either run US64 east to I95, or run US1 to I85, then run I85 until it ends at I95 just north of Richmond. Unfortunately, the Clayton Bypass doesn't really benefit anyone looking to travel north, although it is good for getting through Clayton... if you lived there before that opened up, then you'd know Clayton was terrible during peak traffic times. But, anyhow... the halfway point would be about Richmond, I'd say the central to northern part of the city. That's as far as distance - as far as travel time goes, it can be a real crap shoot, and you'll want to try timing it so you hit Fredericksburg and everything north at a time when traffic isn't heavy.
If you take I26 up to I40 and shoot I40 across, you'll go through North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas, and New Mexico. If you take I85 to Atlanta and shoot across I20, you'll go through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and New Mexico. Really depends on where in SC you're leaving from and where in AZ you're going.
Six hours and 19 minutes, according to Google Maps. This is actually only a few minutes longer than the shorter route going down I85, and is the one I'd recommend if your destination was on the east side of Atlanta... you can gain another hour or two of driving time trying to get through Atlanta if you actually try going through the city.