If your track is a regulation track (400m) then six laps exactly would be 1.5 miles.
5/14 miles=0.357 miles=0.575 km
0.052631578947368421052631578947368 laps
Four laps of a 600 meter track equals about 1.5 miles.
walking around a standard track is 1/4 miles
If the track is 1/4 mile, four times = 1 mile
If you're talking about a standard USA school track, four times is one mile.
2 = .5 mile 4= 1mile 6= 1.5 mile depending on if the track is the standard 400 yard track
A standard high school track is 400 meters in circumference. To convert 1.5 miles to meters, you can calculate that 1.5 miles is approximately 2,414 meters (1 mile = 1,609.34 meters). Thus, to find out how many laps in lane 1 equal 1.5 miles, divide 2,414 meters by 400 meters, which equals about 6.035 laps. Therefore, it takes roughly 6 laps in lane 1 to cover 1.5 miles.
I'm a distance runner and I average around 40 miles per week.
Well, you could give a numerical answer like 3x3=9. Or if you would like a word example here is one: Say you wanted to run 3 miles around your school track. Let's say that one mile around the track is 4 laps. So, you have to do 4 laps 3 times. Which is 4x3 which equals 12.
A standard track is 400m 25 laps is 10,000m=6.2mi 4 laps is approximately 1 mile. 30 laps is about 7.5 miles
Around 12000 miles