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-   -   Puzzle anyone? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/578314-puzzle-anyone.html)

DARISC 12-03-2010 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cashflyer (Post 5706426)
What is the specific gravity of the ink?

Not a factor here.

Quote:

Originally Posted by MBAtarga (Post 5706453)
Is there a cool collar around either of the jars?

Nothing illegal going on here.
Quote:

Originally Posted by A930Rocket (Post 5706470)
Is either one on a conveyor belt?

Yes or no.

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 5706471)
Are you talking about an ounce as mass or volume?

Fluid oz.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Z-man (Post 5706592)
What this transfer of fluids done in the back of a Black Audi Wagon?

If so, then the answer is:
48 angry 911 owners.

Nope. :)

Hint:

Is a broken clock ever right?
Yes, once a day.
Good answer - but not good enough.

Mo_G playing with marbles; that's good...and a requirement, don't forget. SmileWavy

DARISC 12-03-2010 08:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Carlton (Post 5706132)
The water bottle is 1/11 ink, so 10 ounces x 1/11 = 10/11 = 0.909 ink in the water jar.

If you replace "is" with "could be", then "is" true. :)

Head416 12-03-2010 08:34 AM

I think what he's getting at is that even without a uniform mixture, the amount of water/ink will be the same, even if you can't say what that percentage is.

Say you take 1 ounce of ink and put it in the water, but do not mix it. Then you take 1 ounce out of this mixture, but you have no way of knowing what percentage of that ounce is ink. So, if this ounce has x ounces of ink (some fraction of 1 ounce) then the eyedropper has (1-x) ounces of water. When you add it to the ink, you now have (9+x) ounces of ink and (1-x) ounces of water. (9+x)+(1-x)=10 ounces

So in the water you had 10 ounces, added 1 ounce of ink, then removed x ounces of ink and (1-x) ounces of water. So the amount of water is [10-(1-x)]=(9+x) and the amount of ink is (1-x).

Mo_Gearhead 12-03-2010 08:37 AM

Quote: Hint:

Is a broken clock ever right?
Yes, once a day.
Good answer - but not good enough.
___________________

Well, you stated "No word games" ?

A broken clock is correct TWICE a day (day = 24 hours) unless you are saying once each day - and once each night?


YOUR QUESTION:

"Does the bottle of water contain more ink than the bottle of ink contains water"


MY ANSWER : No

I thought it obvious - even if the 'lottery winner' by chance picked the black marble and replaced it in the Ink Jar - the answer to your posed question remains the same. No.

DARISC 12-03-2010 08:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mo_Gearhead (Post 5706818)
YOUR QUESTION:

"Does the bottle of water contain more ink than the bottle of ink contains water"


MY ANSWER : No

I thought it obvious - even if the 'lottery winner' by chance picked the black marble and replaced it in the Ink Jar - the answer to your posed question remains the same. No.

WINNAH!

And proven using the min. ammt. of marbles necessary! :D

Congrats!

1990C4S 12-03-2010 08:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DARISC (Post 5706721)
:

Is a broken clock ever right?

Not if it's digital. So the answer could be zero, one, or two.

DARISC 12-03-2010 09:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Head416 (Post 5706810)
I think ...So in the water you had 10 ounces...

Second place winnah!

You'd have tied Mo with a marble proof - unless you used more marbles than he did. SmileWavy

BK911 12-03-2010 09:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BK911 (Post 5706398)
The water is 90.909% water and 9.09% ink
The ink is 90.009% ink and 9.99% water

So the ink contains more water.

Edit: This is assuming a homogenious mixture. If not, no idea what you scoop out.

I messed up with a decimal point in my calculation.

They are the same!!

DARISC 12-03-2010 09:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BK911 (Post 5706897)
I messed up...!!

Too bad. Time to pick up your marbles and go home. ;)

PRE-H20 12-14-2010 01:05 PM

Begin with a 10 oz. jar of water and a 10 oz. jar of ink.

blah blah blah

Does the bottle of water contain more ink than the bottle of ink contains water?

you didnt tell us how many ounces of water the bottle has.......... if you tell us how many ounces the bottle has compared to the jar its simple.

M.D. Holloway 12-14-2010 01:11 PM

Is the ink well sorted out?

sammyg2 12-14-2010 02:47 PM

Wait, we start with a 10 oz. jar, but you don't actually tell us how much water or ink is in the jars. One could be a 10 oz jar of water that is only 1/4 full!

lm6y 12-14-2010 05:06 PM

What the hell does this have to do with snow tires, or a Dillon reloading machine?

VaSteve 12-14-2010 05:07 PM

I'm not sure if I'm allowed to stir it or not. Or shake violently.

DARISC 12-14-2010 06:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mo_Gearhead (Post 5706818)
..."Does the bottle of water contain more ink than the bottle of ink contains water"

...even if the 'lottery winner' by chance picked the black marble and replaced it in the Ink Jar - the answer to your posed question remains the same. No.

Quote:

Originally Posted by BK911 (Post 5706897)
...They are the same!!

..

Mo_Gearhead 12-14-2010 08:07 PM

Why start a new thread-

Smith lives on 13th Ave. which has houses numbered from 13 to 1300.
Jones wants to know the number of Smith's house.

Jones asks: "Is it less than 500?"
Smith answers - but he lies.

Jones asks: "Is it a perfect square?"
Smith answers - but he lies again.

Jones asks: "Is it a perfect cube?"
Smith answers and this time tells the truth.

Jones says: "If I knew whether or not the second figure was '1' - I could tell you the number of the house.

Smith tells him whether or not the second figure is '1' and Jones announces what he thinks is the number of the house.
But he is wrong.

Question : What is the number of Smith's house?


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