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| Pumps A, B and C operate at their respective constant rates |
| Re: Some tough Math problems : problem 3 |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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remember that rate = reciprocal of time taken to complete one job. also, remember that rates are additive, so rate(pumps a AND b) = rate(pump a) + rate(pump b). so: rate(pumps a AND b) = 5/6 rate(pumps a AND c) = 2/3 rate(pumps b AND c) = 1/2 using the above fact about additive rates, rate(pump a) + rate(pump b) = 5/6 rate(pump a) + rate(pump c) = 2/3 rate(pump b) + rate(pump c) = 1/2 you know you want the rate for all three pumps. from the symmetry of the above equations, it becomes apparent that we can find this by adding together all 3 equations: 2rate(pump a) + 2rate(pump b) + 2rate(pump c) = 5/6 + 2/3 + 1/2 = 2 rate(pump a) + rate(pump b) + rate(pump c) = 1 rate(pumps a AND b AND c) = 1 (because rates are additive) time = reciprocal of 1 = 1 |
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| Thanks! |
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MP
Guest
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Thanks a lot! I kept doing a lot of calculations and got things wrong.
I assumed that let A, B, C complete the job (indivisually) in a, b, c hours. Hence their respective rates would be: 1/a, 1/b, 1/c Then, 1/a + 1/b = 5/6 1/a + 1/c = 2/3 1/b + 1/c = 1/2 Then I was solving the 3 equations to get values of a, b, c. That consumed a lot of time and I had to guess the answer. |
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Rey Fernandez
MGMAT STAFF
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We're glad it makes sense now.
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| Pumps A, B and C operate at their respective constant rates |
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