Absolutely, if the pool happens to be 41.25 feet long.
32 lengths of a standard training pool 25m
In a 50 meter pool, one mile would be 16 laps (32 lengths).
The precise answer is 13.2 laps, according to the following formula: 5,280 divided by 4 divided by 100, 5,280 being the number of feet in a mile; 1,320 being the number of feet in a quarter-mile (5,280 divided by 4); and 100 being the number of feet in a lap with a 50-foot pool.
The standard length of a pool is 25 meters. Therefore, to find the total distance covered in 32 lengths of a pool, you would multiply 25 meters by 32 lengths, which equals 800 meters. So, 32 lengths of a pool would be equivalent to 800 meters in distance.
An olympic sized swimming pool is the standard for all competition pools, training pools and nearly all public pools. It is 50 metres long. A lap is 2 lengths (ie 100 metres long). 32 laps= 32 x 100= 3200 metres ~ 2 miles
A mile is equivalent to 1609.34 meters. In a 50 meter pool, doing 32 lengths (laps) would equal approximately one mile.
82x25 = 2050meters 1 meter = 0.000621371192 miles So The Answer is 1.27381 miles or 1 mile and 481.907 yards
32 in a 50metere (Olympic pool)
A mile is 1600m. So you would need to do 64 lengths to have done 1 mile.Which is 32 laps.32 Laps (down and back) = 1 mile64 Lengths ( 64 lengths X 25 meters/length = 1600 = 1 mile)Technically a mile is 1609 meters so you'd need to swim about 64.36 lengths if you absolutely must get to one mile exactly.There are 1,609.344 meters in a mile. Since there is confusion on what a "lap" is, I will include both a one length and two length answer.When 1 length = 1 lap, you would need to complete 64.3 laps for a mile (I would stop at 64 and call it a mile)When 2 lengths = 1 lap, you would need to complete 32.18 laps for a mile64. I think.1609 / 25 = 64 laps
32 laps in a 50 m pool
In a standard yard pool, 25 yards, it takes 66 laps.
32 laps