Approach 1: The "Distance Gap" Method (Conceptual)This method focuses on how much distance is lost due to the stops.
Analyze the distance in one hour:
If the bus does not stop, it covers 54 km in 60 minutes.
If the bus does stop, it only covers 45 km in 60 minutes.
Calculate the "Lost" Distance:
The bus covered 9 km less than its full potential (54−45=9 km).
Calculate the time required to cover that gap:
We need to find out how long it takes the bus to travel those "lost" 9 km when it is actually moving at its normal speed (54 kmph).
Time = Distance/Speed
Time = 9/54 = 1/6 hour
Convert to minutes:
1/6 × 60 minutes =10 minutes
Conclusion: The 10 minutes the bus would have spent driving those 9 km were instead spent at a standstill.
Approach 2: The Speed Ratio FormulaThere is a direct formula used for "stoppage" problems that helps you get the answer in seconds:
Stop time per hour = {(Fast Speed−Slow Speed)/Fast Speed} * 60
= {(54 - 45)/54} * 60
= 10 minutes