40 minutes.
2007-09-03 06:48:31
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answer #1
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answered by eviechatter 6
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It really just depends on the driving situation. If it is in a small rural city where the speed limit is 25-30 mph then it will be about 15-20 minutes. If it is in a bigger city but nothing like a huge city like Chicago and that where the speed limit is about 40mph it would probilly take 35-45 minutes. If it is in an area where the speed limit is 60+ it could take over an hour easy probably an hour and a half more likely. But then you have to take in how many stops you normally make driving like stop signs red lights and traffic. If it is just a smooth straight shot with one or two brief driving interruptions that is pretty accurate otherwise more info is needed before you can get an accurate answer.
2007-09-03 06:52:12
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answer #2
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answered by lonenightwolf13 2
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If the six minutes includes getting into the car, starting it, stopping at the other end, getting out, and walking to the door, walking is probably not much more than 10 minutes. If the 6 minutes is only the actual drive, then it is probably close to a 25 minute walk.
2007-09-03 16:46:35
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answer #3
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answered by Fred C 7
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How fast was the car going? What was top speed and what was your zero to topspeed time?
Or hey next time just look at you odometer to get the distance and then you can get a much better idea.
Your medium paced walk could be slow to some people or fast to others.
So this is actually a waste of everyones time.
2007-09-03 06:50:18
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answer #4
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answered by repo2agent 3
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Part of your equation is missing. First of all, at what speed is the drive? Second, what speed is a medium pace? Medium walking pace varies by the individual because of physical differences.
2007-09-03 06:48:52
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answer #5
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answered by CUrias 5
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You would have to put it into a time= distance / rate. you'll need to figure out exactly how fast you go and then exactly how far you travel, but if it only takes you six minutes to drive somewhere the easiest and most accurate way to figure this out would just be to walk it.
The problem with the math problem is that it would give you a "direct route" time and thats nearly impossible to do that because of roads, buildings and whatever is in the way of the "direct path"
just walk it and see how long it takes you walk it.
2007-09-03 06:54:38
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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You need to know the mileage more than the time it takes to arrive at point B from point A driving.
For instance, to drive from where I live to where my Mother lives takes about the same amount of time, 5 or 6 minutes. But, as she lives about two miles away, and I walk at a rate of about one mile per 15 minutes, it takes me about half an hour to actually walk to her place.
2007-09-03 06:50:01
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answer #7
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answered by soulguy85 6
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About 43 minutes.
Let's assume you're driving in a residential area (because you would not go walking on a highway, would you?) so your speed would be an average of 25mph.
25mph = 25 miles in 60 minutes = 2.5 miles in 6 minutes.
An average walking speed, without breaking a sweat, would be about 3.5mph (at 4mph, you would start to walk pretty fast).
So, if your walking speed is 3.5 miles in one hour, then it would take you almost 43 minutes to walk 2.5 miles.
2007-09-03 07:06:45
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answer #8
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answered by Howard 4
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Well let's see, where I live we drive 80 mph. That's roughly 7 miles then. It would take me about 3 hours to walk that far, assuming there is no snow on the ground and I'm on a paved walkway.
Kent in SD
2007-09-03 06:48:40
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answer #9
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answered by duckgrabber 4
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I live in a town called Windsor, in California. Windsor is 7 minutes away from Santa Rosa. I walked there ONCE and never did it again and it took me about 30-45 mins, I'm not sure. I jogged on and off.
Whew! I'm tired just thinking about it.
2007-09-03 07:13:47
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answer #10
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answered by hakim1125 6
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How fast are you going? Ten miles an hour I would guess about twenty minutes to a half hour depending on how fast you were going when you drove there. How can you do the math when you don't have the whole equation?
2007-09-03 06:50:48
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answer #11
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answered by nsprdwmn 3
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