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walid_afram
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Post subject: book 4 page 171 4th ed Posted: Fri May 04, 2012 9:42 am |
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Posts: 9
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liam is pulled over for speeding just as he is arriving at work. He explains to the police officer that he could not afford to be late today, and has arrived at work only four minutes before he is to start. The officer explains that if liam had driven 5 mph slower for his whole commute, he would have arrived at work exactly on time. If liam's commute is 30 miles long, how fast was he actually driving? (Assume that liam drove at a constant speed for the duration of his commute.)
Could you please explain to me what's wrong with my following approach:
30 = (r - 5)/60 x (30*60/r + 4)
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messi10
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Post subject: Re: book 4 page 171 4th ed Posted: Fri May 04, 2012 11:49 am |
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Please explain what you are trying to do. What is r here and are you trying to use D = R x T formula?
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walid_afram
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Post subject: Re: book 4 page 171 4th ed Posted: Fri May 04, 2012 1:34 pm |
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Actually there's nothing wrong with the formula, i tried it again and the answer is correct:
r is the speed at which he actually drove
(r - 5) is the speed IF he drove 5mph slower THEN he'd need 4 more minutes; (30*60/r + 4)
multiplying and dividing by 60 are for converting hours to minutes
PS: whatever the speed is, the distance is the same
hope this helps Cheers
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tim
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Post subject: Re: book 4 page 171 4th ed Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 10:48 am |
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Posts: 4410 Location: Southwest Airlines, seat 21C
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:)
_________________ Tim Sanders Manhattan GMAT Instructor
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