yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
.75k = 820.209974 yards. If you are swimming a 25 yard pool: A lap (technically defined as ONE length of a pool not two): 32.8 laps is the answer. So if you're swimming a sprint tri, swim 33 laps.
Two and a half laps
70.4 laps. 25yds is 75 feet. (5280ft/mi)/75ft=70.4. If a lap is one length then 70.4 laps. If a lap is two lengths, i.e., up and back then its 35.2 laps.
An olympic sized pool is 50 metres. If it is a 4x100 Relay one swimmer will swim 2 laps. If each swimmer does two laps and there is 4 of them, 8 laps will have been swum.
on a regular track 4 laps is 1 mile and 8 laps is two miles that is your answer
Some people feel that a lap and a length are the same thing. They will use the terms interchangeably. Competitive swimmers do not often talk about lengths, but when they do they usually mean one complete length of the pool. As such, a lap generally refers to two lengths. For example in a 25 yard pool, a mile is ~35 laps, or ~70 lengths.Webster's II New College Dictionary uses the following definition for lap in regard to pools: "2.b. One complete length of a straight course, as in a swimming pool."
In a 50m pool, a 100m swim would require 2 laps. Each lap is 50m, so swimming two laps would cover a total distance of 100m. Swimmers would start at one end of the pool, swim to the other end (50m), turn around, and swim back to the starting point (another 50m) to complete the 100m swim.
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)
There are two possible answers to this one.625 yards25 yards
You can do this using two ways: 1. convert 1.5km to m i.e = 1500m. Hence # laps = 1500/25 = 60 laps or 2. convert 25 m into km i.e = 0.025. Hence # laps = 1.5/0.025 = 60 laps
An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length.
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