- Joined
- May 27, 2008
- Messages
- 2,919
- Reaction score
- 548
The most impractical thing ever, but I need to know how to do it.
For example:
3 solutions have to be mixed: 95%, 60% and 5%, to get a 70% solution. How many parts of each solution are there?
Here's what I have set up:
95 (70-60)+(95-70)=30
70
60 95-70=25
50 x
Don't know how to get x. Says in the book that it's 25, but I have no idea how to get it. Does 95-70 just carry over to the bottom? Seems strange Would it be (50-(95-70))? That's the only thing I can think of, but the other alligation problem doesn't support that.
Other problem:
50% 5
20% 5
10%
5% 10+40=50
As you see: my previous logic didn't work: 50-(10-5) does not equal 5, the answer here.
For example:
3 solutions have to be mixed: 95%, 60% and 5%, to get a 70% solution. How many parts of each solution are there?
Here's what I have set up:
95 (70-60)+(95-70)=30
70
60 95-70=25
50 x
Don't know how to get x. Says in the book that it's 25, but I have no idea how to get it. Does 95-70 just carry over to the bottom? Seems strange Would it be (50-(95-70))? That's the only thing I can think of, but the other alligation problem doesn't support that.
Other problem:
50% 5
20% 5
10%
5% 10+40=50
As you see: my previous logic didn't work: 50-(10-5) does not equal 5, the answer here.