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A TGV test train set the record for the fastest wheeled train, reaching 574.8 km/h (357.2 mph) on 3 April 2007.The TGV (French: Train à Grande Vitesse, meaning high-speed train)
The speed of a locomotive in the 19th century was about 63 mph. Answered by Ryan Bradshaw of 8HX at Moorside High School, Stoke-on-Trent.
22.5 knots = about 26 mph (25.8925376 mph)
Cruising was 24 mph up to a maximum of 28 mph
an average speed of 162 miles per hour and can go up to 186 miles per hour in commercial use use CTRL + F -___-
Bicycling on a level terrain at 5-9 mph is moderate intensity.
no
No the tgv train was recorded at 574.8km/h (357 mph) and the maglev train (magnetic train) was recorded at 581km/h (361 mph) a 6.2 km/h (4 mph) differenceSource:http://www.wikipedia.org
If the train is moving at 50 mph and the passenger is walking at 2 mph, people on the train would see her moving at 2 mph, while people outside the train would see her moving at 48 mph. 50mph - 2 mph = 48 mph
Train B Will Catch Up To Train A In 11 Hours.
A train you are on is passing a station at 50 mph, you are running (in the same direction) along the train at 5 mph (relative to the train). But are moving at (50 + 5) 55 mph relative to the station.
10:00 is the answer
8:49
357 mph
You are heading North at 3 mph, relative to a fixed point on the track (i.e., earth).
The TGV, or Train Grande Vitesse
Bulet train at two hundred and fifty sixs mph