40 mph
It depends on the distance travelled, If the person had travelled 120 miles the it would be 2 hours. Time = Distance/Speed
60 feet
20 min: 60 mph = 1 mpmin
If you ride your bike 5 kilometres in 20 minutes, you are riding at a speed of 15 kilometres per hour (since there are 60 minutes in an hour). Therefore, in one hour, you will ride your bike 15 kilometres.
60 miles is 96.56km
about 60 miles and hour
The distance is about 3000 miles. Someone pushing fairly hard with a light pack might cover 100 miles/day, giving a total of 30 days. In reality someone like that would probably ride harder, but then add rest days. Someone dragging more gear and/or riding more casually might make it in 60 days.
It is the time it takes for the bike to go from a dead stop to 60 miles per hour.
Depends on a lot of things, your age, your gender, your fitness level, how hard you ride to start with. I'd use up 3500 cals in about 60 miles, but I'm an experienced rider and I ride fairly hard. 90 miles or even more is probably more normal for using up 3500 cals.
Sometimes it can be up to 60 minutes long
1 hour = 60 mins time = distance ÷ speed = 5 miles ÷ 10 miles/hour = 0.5 hour = 0.5 x 6 mins = 30 mins.