A Fistful of Brain Teasers

Posted by: Don Atkinson on 13 November 2017

A Fistful of Brain Teasers

For those who are either non-British, or under the age of 65………. The UK used to have a brilliant system of currency referred to as “Pounds, Shillings and Pence”. Simplified to £ ? s ? d. No! Don’t ask me why the “Pence” symbol is a “d”, just learn it and remember it !

A £ comprised 20 Shillings and a Shilling comprised 12 Pence. Thus a £ comprised 240 Pence. I reckon that both Microsoft and Apple would have difficulty with these numbers in their spreadsheets, more so if we included Guineas, Crowns, Half-Crowns and Florins. However, I digress..............

The purpose of the explanation is to assist with the first two or three teasers that follow. So just to ensure a reasonable comprehension has been grasped…. ….. if each of three children has £3 ? 7s ? 9d, then collectively they have £10 ? 3s ? 3d   Got the idea ? Good ! Just try 5 children, two each with £4 ? 15s ? 8d and three each with £3 ? 3s ?  4d. How much do they have between them ? (this isn’t the first brain teaser, just the basic introduction with some “homework”, the Teasers follow)

Posted on: 08 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

How Far is it to Salisbury?

It’s coming up to Xmas and Naim is running a special delivery service to get product to dealers in time for the big day. Naim have two delivery vans that shuttle between Salisbury and their busiest dealer.

Each day, one van leaves Salisbury bound for the dealer, whilst at the same time the other van leaves the dealer, bound for Salisbury. Both vans follow the same route and pass each other (giving the famous 'Naim Salute') 30 miles from the dealer's. At their destinations each van takes 15 minutes to unload/reload. On the return journey, following the same route, the vans pass each other (giving the famous 'Naim Salute') 15 miles from Salisbury.

How far is it from Salisbury to the dealer's ?

Posted on: 08 December 2017 by sjbabbey

Ian gets £54

Posted on: 08 December 2017 by Innocent Bystander

Agreed: 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8=36, Bruce=414+1... Ian=414+8=4

450-36=414  /9=46  for Adam ....46+8=54 for Ian

Posted on: 10 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Don Atkinson posted:

How Far is it to Salisbury?

It’s coming up to Xmas and Naim is running a special delivery service to get product to dealers in time for the big day. Naim have two delivery vans that shuttle between Salisbury and their busiest dealer.

Each day, one van leaves Salisbury bound for the dealer, whilst at the same time the other van leaves the dealer, bound for Salisbury. Both vans follow the same route and pass each other (giving the famous 'Naim Salute') 30 miles from the dealer's. At their destinations each van takes 15 minutes to unload/reload. On the return journey, following the same route, the vans pass each other (giving the famous 'Naim Salute') 15 miles from Salisbury.

How far is it from Salisbury to the dealer's ?

Thanks to SteveD for holding back on the solution

The answer is 75 miles.

We just need the arithmetic now !!

(perhaps I should have made it clear that the vans travel at steady speeds and that deceleration/acceleration are either negligable or included in the 15 minute turnround times. ie, you can ignore it !

Posted on: 11 December 2017 by steved

How far is it to Salisbury

Firstly, thanks Don for remembering my response the first time you set a similar puzzle! Given that no-one has replied, I will try and explain:-

This is a classic puzzle, in that it is solved more by deductive insight than by mathematical equations. It is a version of the Sam Loyd Ferryboat puzzle, first published over 100 years ago by American chess expert and recreational mathematician Sam Loyd.

When they first meet, the "dealervan" has traveled 30 miles, and together both vans have traveled "X" (X being the distance between Salisbury and Dealer).

When they next meet, both vans together have travelled 3X. Therefore at that point, each vehicle has traveled 3 time as far as when they first met, meaning that dealervan will have traveled 90 miles in total at that point. That 90 miles includes 15 miles on the reverse route, so the distance between Dealer and Salisbury is 75 miles (ie 90 less 15).

I must confess to have tried and failed to solve this "mathematically".

Posted on: 11 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

Thank you Steve, that is a neat, clear and concise explanation. Beautiful.

I expect one or two others will be pleased (possibly relieved ?) that you have posted the solution.

Posted on: 11 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
steved posted:

How far is it to Salisbury

Firstly, thanks Don for remembering my response the first time you set a similar puzzle! Given that no-one has replied, I will try and explain:-

This is a classic puzzle, in that it is solved more by deductive insight than by mathematical equations. It is a version of the Sam Loyd Ferryboat puzzle, first published over 100 years ago by American chess expert and recreational mathematician Sam Loyd.

When they first meet, the "dealervan" has traveled 30 miles, and together both vans have traveled "X" (X being the distance between Salisbury and Dealer).

When they next meet, both vans together have travelled 3X. Therefore at that point, each vehicle has traveled 3 time as far as when they first met, meaning that dealervan will have traveled 90 miles in total at that point. That 90 miles includes 15 miles on the reverse route, so the distance between Dealer and Salisbury is 75 miles (ie 90 less 15).

I must confess to have tried and failed to solve this "mathematically".

Hi Steve,

I have highlighted that part of the solution that I find most people have difficulty grasping, and which I consider is at the heart of the solution.

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

Xmas Sales !

A shop was selling six bespoke shirts in their sale at £15, £22, £30, £26, £16 and £31.

Five of the shirts were sold to two customers, the second customer spending twice as much as the first.

Which shirt wasn’t sold ?

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by u77033103172058601

The £26 one

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

Hi Nick,

Was that a good guess ? (Obviously not !,) 

Trial & error ? Or some sort of formula ?

Well done

Cheers, Don

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by Eloise
Don Atkinson posted:

Hi Nick,

Was that a good guess ? (Obviously not !,) 

Trial & error ? Or some sort of formula ?

Well done

Cheers, Don

You’re as bad as my maths teacher Don... “always show your working young lady or you will score zero”.

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Eloise posted:
Don Atkinson posted:

Hi Nick,

Was that a good guess ? (Obviously not !,) 

Trial & error ? Or some sort of formula ?

Well done

Cheers, Don

You’re as bad as my maths teacher Don... “always show your working young lady or you will score zero”.

I did it by trial & error. A lucky guess is improbable - I tried a couple. But by eliminating one a time and trying the remaining combinations, I got a fairly rapid insight and solution.

My “well done” was a 9/10 for Nick. Telling us it was a good guess would get 10/10 !  

But, yes, I am as bad as your maths teacher.....

 

Posted on: 14 December 2017 by u77033103172058601

I simply answered the question. Spent a few minutes looking for an algebraic-type solution . Instead used some logic to dismiss certain combinations, which meant that brute force was only needed on a small handful of combinations. There is, therefore, no 'workings'.

However, 2 x (22 + 16) = (15 + 30 + 31)

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Nick from Suffolk posted:

I simply answered the question. Spent a few minutes looking for an algebraic-type solution . Instead used some logic to dismiss certain combinations, which meant that brute force was only needed on a small handful of combinations. There is, therefore, no 'workings'.

However, 2 x (22 + 16) = (15 + 30 + 31)

Looks like you did much the same as me Nick !

I wrote down all the combinations of two-shirt purchaces - that was was quick and easy.

A bit of idle browsing and semi-logic followed.

No magic formula. At least, not that I noticed !

 

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

The Point of No Return !

The term “Point of No Return” is now more commonly referred to as the “Point of Safe Return”. It seems a bit more reassuring in the modern-day aviation world of Health & Safety. Nevertheless, the words mean the same.

There are still a few destinations that are remote and isolated such that a diversion to a nearby alternative is impractical, but non-the-less, on many flights, the economics are such that fuel (including reserves) is often only sufficient for the outbound trip and not the round trip. So the Point of Safe Return needs to be identified. Shortly before reaching the Point of Safe Return, the weather and runway availability at destination will be updated and a decision made as to whether to continue or turn around.

In very simple terms, ie assuming the aeroplane flies at a constant speed and relative to the aeroplane the wind blows from a steady direction at a steady speed, the Point of Safe Return is easy to calculate.

For example, A to B is 240 nm (nautical miles). The aeroplane flies at a steady 120 kt (knots) and has sufficient fuel for 3 hours (plus reserves). In nil-wind conditions it will reach its Point of Safe Return after 1 ½ hours. At this time it will have travelled 180 miles from A, and be 60 nm short of B. It would have 1 ½ hours of fuel available for the homebound leg.

If the wind is constant throughout, such that there is a steady 30 kt tailwind on the outbound leg (*). And a steady 30 kt head wind on the homebound leg (*), whereabouts is the Point of Safe Return in terms of distance from A and distance short of B ?

(*) 120 + 30 = outbound groundspeed; 120 - 30 = homebound groundspeed

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by u77033103172058601
Don Atkinson posted:
Nick from Suffolk posted:

I simply answered the question. Spent a few minutes looking for an algebraic-type solution . Instead used some logic to dismiss certain combinations, which meant that brute force was only needed on a small handful of combinations. There is, therefore, no 'workings'.

However, 2 x (22 + 16) = (15 + 30 + 31)

Looks like you did much the same as me Nick !

I wrote down all the combinations of two-shirt purchaces - that was was quick and easy.

A bit of idle browsing and semi-logic followed.

No magic formula. At least, not that I noticed !

 

No need to write down all the combinations of 2. No combination of 3  can involve only a single odd number. That reduces the combinations to check by a lot.

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Nick from Suffolk posted:
Don Atkinson posted:
Nick from Suffolk posted:

I simply answered the question. Spent a few minutes looking for an algebraic-type solution . Instead used some logic to dismiss certain combinations, which meant that brute force was only needed on a small handful of combinations. There is, therefore, no 'workings'.

However, 2 x (22 + 16) = (15 + 30 + 31)

Looks like you did much the same as me Nick !

I wrote down all the combinations of two-shirt purchaces - that was was quick and easy.

A bit of idle browsing and semi-logic followed.

No magic formula. At least, not that I noticed !

 

No need to write down all the combinations of 2.No combination of 3  can involve only a single odd number. That reduces the combinations to check by a lot.

That's where, in my case,  "A bit of idle browsing and semi-logic followed".

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by sjbabbey

168 nautical miles from A i.e. 72 nautical miles short of B

168/150 = 1.12 hours

168/90 = 1.8777 hours

total =     2.9977 hours

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by u77033103172058601

Or 168 3/4 nautical miles (1 and 1/8 hours), which gets rid of those pesky 7.992s.

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
sjbabbey posted:

168 nautical miles from A i.e. 72 nautical miles short of B

168/150 = 1.12 hours

168/90 = 1.8777 hours

total =     2.9977 hours

That's pretty close sj, and certainly close enough for all practical purposes which would need to allow for the turn and a few other practical factors but...........(at the risk of Eloise intervening )

...........we are only dealing with the simple mathematics of the distance to the Point of Safe Return and hence the times will add up to 3 hours exactly, and the distance(s) are therefore not quite so clean-cut as 168 & 72, although they are mathematically fairly elegant

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Nick from Suffolk posted:

Or 168 3/4 nautical miles (1 and 1/8 hours), which gets rid of those pesky 7.992s.

ah-ha !

Neat one Nick ! you beat me to it whilst I was drafting the above rely.

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

.............and if, in the original question, the wind was reversed, so there was a 30 kt headwind outbound and a 30 kt tailwind homebound, the Point of Safe Return would be...........?

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by u77033103172058601

Exactly the same, the problem is symmetric

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson
Nick from Suffolk posted:

Exactly the same, the problem is symmetric

Yep. Spot on.

Posted on: 15 December 2017 by Don Atkinson

It's easy enough to create a little formula (*) for the distance D to the Point of Safe Return

          D =  [E.O.H] ÷ [O+H]

Where E = Endurance (3 hours)

          O = Outbound groundspeed (150 kt)

          H = Homebound groundspeed (90 kt)

(*) anybody ?