If you didn't notice any symptoms such as smoke, sluggishness, or warning lights, then probably yes, it should be fine. It depends on the car, how overfilled it was, and how you drove it.
Even if the overfill was just a little, many Volkswagen (and Audi and friends) or Nissan (including Infinity) vehicles can have issues with idle quality and cruise control operation until the engine computer is commanded to relearn the idle adaptation.
Lydia's speed on Tuesday was 180 miles divided by 3 hours, or 60 mph. If she then drove 7 hours at 60 mph, she drove 420 miles. Altogether, she drove 420 + 180 or 600 miles.
You drove 91.25 miles.
if he drove for 3 hours and drove at 65 miles per hour then 65 x 3= 195 miles the answer is 195 miles! A.KISS
On day 1 he traveled 428 miles and on day two he traveled 668 miles
60 miles
Average speed was 65 mph. 100 miles + 420 miles = 520 miles 2 hours + 6 hours = 8 hours 520/8 = 65 mph
To get the answer, you would divide how many miles he drove by how long it took him to drive it. The information you need to set up your problem is 150 miles and 2.5 hours. 150 / 2.5 = 60 So Jordan drove an average of 60 miles per hour.
The answer is 224/4 = 56 miles per hour
about 3000 miles
my ford ka battery is 2years every morning it is flat even if i have done a 100 miles the day before.
85 miles
That would depend on the average speed. If the average is 50 mph, they drove 650 miles.