miles... in kph??? Anyway, the speed of light is 300,000 kilometers/second; you can convert that to whatever unit you want. For example, to convert to kilometers/hour, multiply by 3600.
96 kilometers or 60 miles.
65.247
Kilometers do not convert to "miles per hour", as one is a measure of distance and the other is a measure of speed. If you actually want to know how many miles are equal to 326 kilometers, the answer is aproximately 202.567 miles.
80 km = 49.71 miles (rounded)
28 miles per hour. ( aprox )
55 km = 34.18 miles
The speed limit is 49.7 (50) miles per hour.
About 33 miles per hour.
"Faster" refers to speeds. Miles and kilometers are units of distance, not of speed.
about 9.3 mph
No, radio signals travel at the speed of light in a vacuum, which is about 186,282 miles per second (299,792 kilometers per second). This is the ultimate speed limit in the universe according to the theory of relativity.
Canada uses kilometers per hour not miles per hour. 100 kilometers per hour is approximately 60 miles per hour.
Yes, because 40 miles per hour equals 64.4 kilometers per hour.
No, x kilometers per hour and x miles per hour are equal speeds. The conversion factor between kilometers and miles is 1.60934, so when converting from kilometers to miles, the number decreases but the speed remains the same.
You need to convert miles to kilometers, ie. multiply 65 by 1.61. The answer then is 104.65, which in practice would be nearer 100 km/h. I'm basing this on the asumption that your speedometer doesn't have miles - only kilometers and you want an answer that will keep you within the legal limit. I lived in Europe for 10 years. We divided by 8 and multiplied by 5 to convert from kilometers to miles, and divided by 5 and multiplied by 8 to convert from miles to kilometers. It is a rough, but very accurate conversion that you can do in your head most times, and it keeps you legal. In your example 65 divided by 5 is 13. 13 times 8 is 104 kilometers. As you can see, the error is less than 1 kph and no cop in the world cares about that.
The speed limit is exactly that. The LIMIT. Driving faster than the limit can get you a ticket. So, No.