That will depend upon the particular species of hummingbird. North American hummingbirds are said to beat their wings around 53 times per second during normal flight. A straight conversion to per minute or per hour would be about 3180 beats per minute or 190800 beats per hour. It is unknown if they can maintain it for that long. Larger hummingbirds generally have fewer beats per second and smaller ones have more.
30000
55 times per second.
A hummingbird's wings can beat up to 80 times per second.
About 70 times a second during its normal flight & about 200 times a second when courtship diving.
On average, hummingbirds flap their wings around 50 to 80 times per second, but this can vary depending on the species. Some hummingbirds can even reach up to 200 flaps per second during courtship displays or high-speed flight.
Hummingbirds beat their wings 70 times per second!
Hummingbirds
They beat their wings 12-80 beats per second, depending on the species. For 12 beats per second, that is over 8640 per hour.
Hummingbirds only have two wings. However, they flap their wings about 70 times per second, making it look like they may have more then that to the human eye. Hope this helps!
A Rufous Hummingbird has a wingspan of 3 - 4 cm and can flap/beat thier wings about 200 times a second
The Giant Hummingbird beats its wings 10-15 times per second. The fastest recorded rate is about 80 beats per second on an Amethyst Woodstar Hummingbird. North American hummingbirds average around 53 flaps per second.
The Giant Hummingbird's wings beat 8-10 beats per second, the wings of medium sized hummingbirds beat about 20-25 beats per second and the smallest beat 70 beats per second. 8-10 beats per second would be 30,720-36,000 per hour assuming they are in complete flight for an hour, which I doubt