It turns out that 320,544 inches per week equals 53 yards per hour. Take the 53 and multiply by 24 (hours/day) and by 7 (days/week) and by 36 in/yd) to get your answer.
There are 168 hours in one week. There are 36 inches in one yard. Therefore, something that travels at a constant rate of 53 yards per hour will travel 53 x 36 x 168 = 320544 inches per week. 6709*09+9=6727
2008 NFL Season: 1) Brian Westbrook - Philadelphia Eagles - 5 foot, 8 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 220 times for 886 yards and caught 52 passes for 390 yards. 2) Leon Washington - New York Jets - 5 foot, 8 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 66 times for 388 yards and caught 41 passes for 326 yards. 3) Ray Rice - Baltimore Ravens - 5 foot, 8 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 107 times for 454 yards and caught 33 passes for 273 yards. 4) Jerome Harrison - Cleveland Browns - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season he has carried the ball 32 times for 245 yards and caught 10 passes for 117 yards. 5) Dominic Rhodes - Indianapolis Colts - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season he has carried the ball 152 times for 538 yards and caught 45 passes for 302 yards. 6) Steve Slaton - Houston Texans - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 248 times for 1,190 yards and caught 45 passes for 341 yards. 7) Maurice Jones-Drew - Jacksonville Jaguars - 5 foot, 8 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 174 times for 746 yards and caught 61 passes for 555 yards. 8) Andre Hall - Denver Broncos - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 35 times for 144 yards and caught 3 passes for 25 yards. 9) P.J. Pope - Denver Broncos - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 17 times for 130 yards and caught 3 passes for 24 yards. 10) DeAngelo Williams - Carolina Panthers - 5 foot, 8 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 248 times for 1,337 yards and caught 22 passes for 121 yards. 11) Warrick Dunn - Tampa Bay Buccaneers - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 176 times for 749 yards and caught 45 passes for 326 yards. 12) Earnest Graham - Tampa Bay Buccaneers - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 132 times for 563 yards and caught 23 passes for 174 yards. 13) J.J. Arrington - Arizona Cardinals - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 30 times for 178 yards and caught 27 passes for 237 yards. 14) Frank Gore - San Francisco 49ers - 5 foot, 9 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 229 times for 978 yards and caught 42 passes for 367 yards. 15) Darren Sproles - San Diego Chargers - 5 foot, 6 inches tall. Through Week 16 of the 2008 season, he has carried the ball 47 times for 215 yards and caught 27 passes for 325 yards.
There is no possible equation, formula, syllogism, lemma, postulate, algorithm, code, or corollary that can help you in any way to convert quarts to inches. If units of volume could be converted to units of length and distance, then you could tell us how many yards of milk you drank last week, or how many gallons tall you are.
None. "Cubic yard" is a unit of volume, or space. "Square yard" is a unit of area. They measure different things, with different physical dimensions, and they can't convert to each other. If volume and area could convert to each other, then you'd be able to figure out how many acres of gas you put in the car last week, and how many gallons of carpet it'll take to do the upstairs hallway.
Zero. Kilometers measure distance. Liters measure volume. They cannot be converted. If you could convert volume to length, then it would be possible to figure out how many yards of gas you put in the car last week, and how many inches of milk you poured on your cereal this morning.
33280
With the information provided in the question, you cannot. It can be a fraction of a day, a week, a month or whatever. But you need to specify which.
It is 36.25 for the week.
54,828 yards as of week 17 of the 2010 season.
517 yards. Week 1 2011 Season vs Miami Dolphins.
11 per hour for 40 hours is 11*40 = 440 for the 40 hour week.