10.5 sec.
10 secs
5 hours and 4 seconds or 304 seconds
14 Seconds
It will take 8 seconds for the clock to strike 10 o'clock. Each hour is represented by the number of strikes equivalent to the hour, so between 5 and 10 o'clock, there are 5 strikes that take 1 second each.
First clock: Strikes '1' at time = 0, strikes '12' at time = 55 ===> 5 seconds between strokes. Second clock: Strikes '1' at time = 0, strikes '12' at time = 66 ===> 6 seconds between strokes. Time of 1st clock's 5th stroke = 0 + (4 x 5) = 20 sec. Time of 2nd clock's 7th stroke = 0 + (6 x 6) = 36 sec. Interval is 16 seconds.
4 seconds
It really depends on the clock. In general, a longer pendulum takes longer to go back and forth.
It takes 1.25 seconds for each chime so it will chime 72.5 times in 58 seconds
The second hand of a clock completes one full revolution in 60 seconds. Moving from the 6 to the 10 covers 4 ticks on the clock face, each representing 5 seconds. Therefore, it takes the second hand 20 seconds to move from the 6 to the 10.
It takes 1 minute to rotate 1 time.
If it is a thunderstorm, you check how long it takes to hear the thunder after you see a lightning strike. For every five seconds, the lightning strike is about one mile away. The lightning causes the thunder, and the sound travels at a speed of about one mile per five seconds.
The second hand of a clock completes one full revolution every 60 seconds. To move from the 3 to the 8 on the clock face, the second hand needs to cover a distance of 5 out of the 60 total seconds on the clock. Therefore, it would take 5/60 or 1/12 of a minute for the second hand to move from the 3 to the 8, which is equivalent to 5 seconds.