senseimichael
New member
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2020
- Messages
- 44
I normally have no issues with linear equations (compared to those crazy questions for Singapore Primary Math where I cannot use algebra), but this one stumped me.
A gardener needs 6 bushels of a potting medium of 40% peat moss and 60% vermiculite. He decides to add 100% vermiculite to his current potting medium that is 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite. The gardener has 5 bushels of the 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite mix. Does he have enough of the 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite mix to make 6 bushels of the 40% peat moss and 60% vermiculite mix?
My solution with algebra:
Let x be amount of 50/50 mix. Let y be amount of 100 mix.
x + y = 6 [1]
y + 0.5x = 0.6 (6) [2]
Subst x = 6 - y into [2]
y + 3 - 0.5y = 3.6
0.5y = 0.6
y = 1.2
Hence because he can only have up to 1 bushel of vermiculite to be added, and he needs 1.2 bushels to get 60% vermiculite at the end, he does not have enough.
However, when I tried applying the numbers directly using proportion:
He has 2.5p + 2.5v = 5 bushels of potting mixture.
2.5p remains the same, but is now 40% of the mixture. In order for the potting mixture to be 60% V, it has to be 3.75v. Again at 3.75v + 2.5p = 6.25 mixture, it is not enough.
But what stumps me is the fact that with proportion, I need 1.25 of V to be added to get 60% vermiculite! It is different from the answer I got using algebra!
One or both of my mathematical assumptions must have been wrong!
A gardener needs 6 bushels of a potting medium of 40% peat moss and 60% vermiculite. He decides to add 100% vermiculite to his current potting medium that is 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite. The gardener has 5 bushels of the 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite mix. Does he have enough of the 50% peat moss and 50% vermiculite mix to make 6 bushels of the 40% peat moss and 60% vermiculite mix?
My solution with algebra:
Let x be amount of 50/50 mix. Let y be amount of 100 mix.
x + y = 6 [1]
y + 0.5x = 0.6 (6) [2]
Subst x = 6 - y into [2]
y + 3 - 0.5y = 3.6
0.5y = 0.6
y = 1.2
Hence because he can only have up to 1 bushel of vermiculite to be added, and he needs 1.2 bushels to get 60% vermiculite at the end, he does not have enough.
However, when I tried applying the numbers directly using proportion:
He has 2.5p + 2.5v = 5 bushels of potting mixture.
2.5p remains the same, but is now 40% of the mixture. In order for the potting mixture to be 60% V, it has to be 3.75v. Again at 3.75v + 2.5p = 6.25 mixture, it is not enough.
But what stumps me is the fact that with proportion, I need 1.25 of V to be added to get 60% vermiculite! It is different from the answer I got using algebra!
One or both of my mathematical assumptions must have been wrong!