150 kilometers per hour is 81 Knots.
172 miles per hour
it was 150 mph
150 to 160 mph winds. Devastaing winds and rains.
The Galveston hurricane (not Hurricane Galveston) had peak winds of 150 mph.
The landing speed is 155 knots or more generally from 150 to 160 knots, depending on weight and wind conditions.
It is 150 knots taken in 1989 in abeerdeen
150 kilometers per hour is 81 Knots.
To calculate the wind speed of a flood: Lets say D stands for the depth of the flood in meters, and G is the speed of gravity, which is 1471/150 or 9121/150. The land speed of the flood would be the square root of D and G. Multiply by 900/463 to convert from meters per second to air or nautical miles (knots). So then, the equation for it is: knots = sqrt(D * 1471/150) * 900/463.
150 knots
150 knots
Technically, but unlikely. For instance, a slow airplane is capable of staying in the air at about 30 knots/34 mph. 34 mph is a pretty strong wind, but in hurricanes, winds can be as fast as 150 mph. If a plane is flying directly into the wind at 30 knots, and the wind is blowing at 30 knots, the plane will not be moving relative to the ground. (Ground speed zero). The planes airspeed will still be 30 knots. NASA has a plane that goes very slow (slower than a bicycle). In a stiff wind, it will go backwards relative to the ground. Most pilots wouldn't fly in a wind that was blowing at a speed capable of holding them in one place. Not because of any danger in the air, because there wouldn't be, but because landing (on the runway) would be extremely difficult to impossible.
80 knots or about 112 mph i fly one
it all depends on thecondition but it is about 150 knots
172 miles per hour
The speed of 150 knots is equal to 172.6 mph (the conversion is 1.15077945 miles/nautical mile).
3 hours 43 minutes.