Car A vs Car B 0-100mph Race: Who Wins?

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In a 0-100 mph race, car A, which accelerates from 0-60 mph in 4.3 seconds, will be ahead of car B, which takes 4.8 seconds. When both cars reach 60 mph, car A will have traveled 57.6 meters, while car B will have covered 64.4 meters. From 60 to 100 mph, car A takes 7.3 seconds and travels 261 meters, whereas car B takes 6.8 seconds and covers 243.2 meters. Ultimately, car A will be 11 meters ahead of car B when they both hit 100 mph. The calculations provide a clear indication of the performance differences between the two vehicles.
Matty T
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car A & car B do 0-60mph in 4.3secs & 4.8secs respectively.
both do 0-100mph in 11.6secs

?in a straight line race from standstill which car would be in front & by how much when they hit 100mph?
 
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Are we to assume that the acceleration from 0 to 60 mph is constant, and that the acceleration from 60 mph to 100 mph is constant (but different)?

Anyway, you can solve this problem with one formula:
V_f^2 = V_0^2 + 2ax
a = \frac{V_f - V_0}{t}
x = \frac{V_f^2 - V_0^2}{2\frac{V_f - V_0}{t}} = \frac{t}{2}(V_f + V_0)

Part 1: When the cars hit 60mph, car A will be at 57.6 meters and car B will be at 64.4 meters.
Part 2: Car A's acceleration from 60 to 100 takes 7.3 seconds, whereas car B's takes only 6.8 seconds. The distance car A will pass between 60mph and 100mph is 261 meters, whereas car B will only pass 243.2 meters.

The total distance of car A is 318.6 meters, and the total distance of car B is 307.6. So car A will be in front of car B by 11 meters when they both hit 100 mph.

Of course, I'm not sure I'm right and I'm probably not. :smile:
 
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