A mile in a 25 yard pool equals 71 lengths or 36 laps (1,760 yards in a mile).
A mile in a 25 meter pool equals 66 lengths or 33 laps (1,650 meters in a mile).
In a 50 Meter pool, a mile is 1,650 meters, which is 33 lengths or 17 laps of the pool.
2 lengths of a pool equals 1 lap.
There are 5280 feet in a mile. Thirty-five 150 foot laps takes you 5250 feet. Another 30 feet (less than half the pool) and you're done.
38 laps exactly! Each mile has 4 quarters, thus: > 9 miles have 9 × 4 = 36 laps > a half mile has ½ × 4 = 2 laps for a total of 38 laps
Two and a half laps!
Four times. 1 mile = 1609 meters
Exactly 2.5 laps on a 400m track and 2.49 laps for a 440 yards track.
If each lap is 25 yards you must swim 70.4 laps to reach one mile.
Assuming laps means two lengths (there and back in a lane): 1yd = 0.9144m 20yd = 18.288m 2 lengths = 36.576m 1km = 1000m = 1000m / 36.576m ~= 27.34 laps (just over 54 2/3 lengths)
3 laps.Start off jogging and don't walk and you'll do alright
quarter mile track= 400 meters To be technically a mile is 1609 meters, be to make this a bit easier round it down to 1600 meters, So 4 laps to a mile, 9x4=36 + 2 for the half mile = 38 laps if you really want to make sure its the full 9.5, add on another 100 meter stretch, either the turn or striaght away and youll be a bit over but good
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
64.37376 lengths to be exact. So in other words 32.1870 laps. Have fun buddy.
"4 laps around a regular track=1 mile" Since the standard for tracks built in the last 20+ years is 400M, then you must go 9.344 meters further than 4 laps. Over 90% of the outdoor tracks in existence are only 400M and will thus require the extra 9.344 meters to equal a true mile. This is why most track meets only run the 1500M or the 1600M and not the mile. Unfortunately, most people erroneously assume that 4 laps equal a mile, due to older tracks being built to a non-metric standard of 440 yards. If you want to finish on the common start/finish line and you'd like to run/walk a mile, then you should start at the beginning of the 4x400M relay exchange zone, which is 10 meters before the finish line. By doing that you will run/walk about 1 meter more than 1 mile, but you won't be short of a mile, as you would be if you only do 4 laps.