yes i can run a mile in five minutes and twelve seconds
This equates to a pace of 15 minutes 3.2 seconds per mile.
To convert a pace of 1 minute and 23 seconds per mile into total minutes, first convert the seconds into a fraction of a minute. Since there are 60 seconds in a minute, 23 seconds is approximately 0.383 minutes. Therefore, 1 minute and 23 seconds equal about 1.383 minutes per mile.
3 Miles in 19.5 minutes (19 minutes 30 seconds) is 1 mile in 6.5 minutes (6 minutes 30 seconds). (19.5 ÷ 3 = 6.5)That is based on her average speed. It is safe to assume that she can run one mile or just even the first of 3 miles in less time, probably around 6 minutes. That is a good pace! A 5k (five kilometers) run is about 3.107 miles. A mile in 6.5 minutes is the same as 3.107 miles in 20 minutes 11.7 seconds (average speed of 9.23 MPH).The female record for a 5K is about 14 minutes 11 seconds. A very good time is still 17-20 minutes. A good beginners time is around 30 minutes.
Minutes per mile = 35/3.7 = 9.46 approx * * * * * * 9 minutes 27 seconds per mile
The pace is 10.91 minutes per mile.
the answer is 175 seconds
Six minutes is a decent mile time for anyone.
It is 1 mile in 7 minutes 18 seconds.
2x60 is 120, + 55 is 175 mins.
The duration of Five Mile Creek is 2760.0 seconds.
This equates to a pace of 15 minutes 3.2 seconds per mile.
yes this is a very good time. my mile time is five minutes and forty seconds. im 14 and im in the top of my school for running. that's very good.
anything is possible. this could be true but this yearn 6 would have to be trained.
1 mile is 0.62 kilometers 480 (8 minutes in seconds) multiplied by .62 = 297.6 seconds 297.6 seconds = 4 minutes, 57.6 seconds
To convert a pace of 1 minute and 23 seconds per mile into total minutes, first convert the seconds into a fraction of a minute. Since there are 60 seconds in a minute, 23 seconds is approximately 0.383 minutes. Therefore, 1 minute and 23 seconds equal about 1.383 minutes per mile.
Your mile pace was 6.56 minutes.
You can divide 60 (the number of minutes in an hour) by the minutes per mile value to get miles per hour. (if you have minutes and seconds, divide seconds by 60 to get a decimal and add to the whole minutes). However, runners are faster in shorter distances and slower in longer distances. That will limit the accuracy of any extrapolation. Why not just multiply the minutes per mile by the number of miles?