ur car is slow
koenigsegg ccrx is the yellow car at the end of redline.
Porche
In the movie Redline (2007), Natasha is played by Nadia Bjorlin.
the normal price for the most pricey car is 34.7million dollarsgavin rote this at crazy facts :) :) :( :) :)
9 mph or 14 kmph
It depends upon how long it travels for. Distance = speed * time So if the car travels at 60 mph for 2 hours, the distance is 60 mph * 2 hours = 120 miles But if the car travels at 60 mph for 30 minutes (0.5 hours), the distance is 60 mph * 0.5 hours = 30 miles.
330 miles / 5.5 hours = 60 mph
No, the energy of a moving car is proportional to the square of its speed. So, a car traveling at 60 mph carries four times the energy as the same car traveling at 30 mph.
12
koenigsegg ccrx is the yellow car at the end of redline.
Well it is still 60 miles. At 60 mph it will take you 1 hour and at 27 mph it will take 2.22 hours.
Kinetic energy (KE) is calculated using the formula ( KE = \frac{1}{2} mv^2 ), where ( m ) is mass and ( v ) is velocity. For a car traveling at 60 mph, the KE is proportional to ( (60)^2 ), while for a car at 15 mph, it's proportional to ( (15)^2 ). Thus, the KE at 60 mph is ( \frac{(60)^2}{(15)^2} = \frac{3600}{225} = 16 ) times greater than that at 15 mph. Therefore, the car traveling at 60 mph has 16 times more kinetic energy than the one going at 15 mph.
60 miles.
No, Car B will not overtake Car A because they are moving at the same speed. They will maintain the same distance between them as long as both continue to travel at 60 mph.
At 60 MPH, about 1 hour.
If you average 60 mph, then it will take 18.16667 hours, which is 18 hours 10 minutes.
No, when two cars collide while approaching each other at 60 mph, the impact would be equivalent to one car hitting a solid steel wall at 60mph.Newtons third law states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. When a car is traveling at 60 mph and hits a solid steel wall, the wall applies a force equal to 60 mph back toward the car. This is the same as if a car that is traveling at 60 mph hits another car traveling at 60 mph. In both scenarios, the car is traveling at 60 mph and at the point of collision a force equal to 60 mph is imparted on the car.