If 1 tick equals 3 tacs and 2 tacs equal 5 tocs, what is the ratio of 1 tic to one toc?
1) 15/2
2) 6/5
3) 5/6
4) 3/10
5) 1/15
The explanation says: Get both tics and tocs in terms of the same number of tacs. Since we are given the value of tics in terms of 3 tacs, and tocs in terms of 2 tacs, let's use the LCM of 2 and 3, or 6. If 1 tic equals 3 tacs, then 2 tics equal 5 tacs. If 2 tacs equal 5 tocs, then 6 tocs equals 3x5 or 15 tocs. Therefore 2 tics = 6 tacs = 16 tocs. We don't care about tacs anymore, just tics and tocs.
I completely understand it till this point. the following is where I get lost:
Divide to get the ratio of units on one side, and the numbers on the other side.
2 tics = 15 tocs
1 tic/1 toc = 15/2
I would think the ratio of tics to tocs is 2:15, not 15:2. Please help!
Thanks sooo much!
1) 15/2
2) 6/5
3) 5/6
4) 3/10
5) 1/15
The explanation says: Get both tics and tocs in terms of the same number of tacs. Since we are given the value of tics in terms of 3 tacs, and tocs in terms of 2 tacs, let's use the LCM of 2 and 3, or 6. If 1 tic equals 3 tacs, then 2 tics equal 5 tacs. If 2 tacs equal 5 tocs, then 6 tocs equals 3x5 or 15 tocs. Therefore 2 tics = 6 tacs = 16 tocs. We don't care about tacs anymore, just tics and tocs.
I completely understand it till this point. the following is where I get lost:
Divide to get the ratio of units on one side, and the numbers on the other side.
2 tics = 15 tocs
1 tic/1 toc = 15/2
I would think the ratio of tics to tocs is 2:15, not 15:2. Please help!
Thanks sooo much!












