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KTsincere
Guest
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The ratios are comparing the 4 different sewing machines productivity. So if the fastest machine (1:2:3:5) can sew 1 shirt in 2 hours that means it can sew 5 shirts in 10 hours. Now all you have to do is use that logic to say that the other machines ratios are as follows : 1 shirt / 10 hours , 2 shirts / 10 hours, 3 shirts / 10 hours.
(1/10)+(2/10)+(3/10) = So combined they can do 6 shirts in 10 hours. The questions asks how many hours will it take them to sew 3 shirts? 6/10=3/x x=5 hours Hope it helps... KT |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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hi -
the first thing that you should realize is that the ratio given in the problem is just that: a ratio. the actual numbers 1, 2, 3, 5 don't have to, and almost certainly don't, represent quantities whose actual values are 1, 2, 3, and 5; they represent proportions. with that view in mind, then, the ratio in question actually stands for both of the quantities you propose. for if the actual numbers of shirts sewn in some fixed number of hours are in a ratio of 1:2:3:5, then so will be the rates of productivity. incidentally, rate of productivity in this problem would be defined as shirts per hour, anyway, so there's effectively no difference between the number of shirts sewn in one hour and the productivity rate of the machine. so: in this problem you have that the fastest machine sews 1 shirt in 2 hours, for a rate of 1/2 shirt per hour, or 0.5 shirt per hour. so: first : second : third : 0.5 = 1: 2 : 3 : 5 first = 0.1 shirt/hr second = 0.2 shirt/hr third = 0.3 shirt/hr all together = 0.6 shirt/hr rate * time = output (0.6 shirt/hr) * time = 3 shirts time = 3 / 0.6 5 hours my my, those are some slow machines. |
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Jay
Guest
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Thanks for the responses - got it I was not reading it the right way.
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Guest
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can someone pls explain how to understand the ratios. In this case 1:2:3:5, if the given ratio is the no. of hrs a machine takes to sew a shirt, then isnt "1" the fastest machine?
I'm having difficutly understanding these kind of ratio problems |
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Rey Fernandez
MGMAT STAFF
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No. The numbers tell us, proportionately, the number of shirts per unit time the four machines are able to produce. As a result the machine that corresponds to 5 in the ratio is the fastest... it sews 5 shirts in the time that it takes the slowest machine to sew 1 shirt. Rey |
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