22.62 miles per hour
The average pace for a human on level ground is 4 miles per hour. So one hour and fifteen minutes.
well i can tell your not that good with motors but its 170 mph It depends on what it is mounted on. No boat would do that speed with a 250 cc engine.
It would be 1,00,800
The Earth spins at a rate of about 15 degrees per hour. At the equator, the "tangent velocity" is about 1,066 miles per hour, and this speed decreases as latitude increases. At mid-latitudes in the United States - or in Australia - the velocity is between 600 and 800 miles per hour.I learned it was about 1000 miles pur hourThe Earth spin speed in miles is 25000/24 or just over 1000 mph. This is based on the equators Earth circumference of 25,000 mi and that the Earth rotation is in 24 hrs.The earth spins at the rate of (one complete spin plus a tiny bit more) every 24 hours.If you're standing on the equator, then you're moving toward the east at about1,040 miles per hour.If you're standing halfway between the equator and either the north or south pole,then you're moving toward the east at about 735 miles per hour.If you're standing 70 miles from the north or south pole, then you're movingtoward the east at about 18 miles per hour.If you're standing right on top of the north or south pole, then you're just spinning,not moving east or west.
A speed of 93 miles per hour has no significance in tropical systems. At 74 miles per hour a tropical storm becomes a category 1 hurricane. At 96 miles per hour a hurricane is considered to be a category 2.
No, though it is close. Winds of 74 mph or greater are considered hurricane force.
A storm becomes a hurricane when its sustained wind speed reaches 74 miles per hour (119 kilometers per hour) or higher. At this point, it is classified as a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
75 miles per hour
Hurricane Katrina comes at about 1000 miles per hour.
the speed is 39mph and 74mph respectively
74 miles per hour
Category 1 (the lowest) for a hurricane is winds of 74-95 miles an hour.
74
It varies considerably. A tropical storm must have sustained winds of at least 74 miles per hour to be considered a hurricane. Hurricanes with sustained winds has high as 200 miles per hour have been observed, along with stronger gusts.
It can reach speeds of about 320 km per hour (almost 200 miles per hour)
To be classified as a hurricane, a tropical cyclone needs sustained winds of at least 74 miles per hour (119 kilometers per hour). This is the minimum threshold for a storm to be designated as a hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.