how fast ami going

You’re asking “how fast am I going,” so here’s the quick way to think about
it. Speed is how much distance you cover in a certain amount of time, and
the basic formula is:
speed = distance ÷ time.
1. The simple formula
To find your speed, you need two numbers:
- How far you travel (distance)
- How long it takes (time)
Then you calculate:
- If you walk 100 meters in 50 seconds:
- speed = 100 ÷ 50 = 2 meters per second.
- If you drive 10 kilometers in 15 minutes (0.25 hours):
- speed = 10 ÷ 0.25 = 40 km/h.
Any unit that is “distance over time” works, like m/s, km/h, or mph.
2. How to estimate your own speed
If you don’t have a speedometer:
- Pick two clear points (for example, two lampposts or landmarks).
- Measure or estimate the distance between them (apps/maps can help).
- Time how long you take to go from one to the other with a stopwatch or phone.
- Use speed = distance ÷ time and convert units if needed (for instance between m/s and km/h you multiply or divide by 3.6).
Example: If a runner covers 400 m in 80 seconds:
- speed = 400 ÷ 80 = 5 m/s ≈ 18 km/h.
3. Instant vs average speed
- Average speed: Use the formula over a whole trip (total distance ÷ total time).
- Instantaneous speed: What a speedometer shows at a specific moment (like your exact speed right now in a car).
Without your actual distance and time, I can’t tell you your exact speed, but if you give me:
- how far you traveled, and
- how long it took,
I can calculate it for you using the same formula. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.