HPengineer wrote:The ratio of two positive numbers is 3 to 4. If K is added to each number the new ratio will be 4 to 5 and the sum of the numbers will be 117. What is the value of K?
A.) 1
B.) 13
C.) 14
D.) 18
E.) 21
from beat the gmat video questions
A great way to handle ratio problems is to use a
ratio box. Let's call the two unknown values X and Y and make a box for the second ratio of 4 to 5. Here's what the box looks like:
__________X____Y____Total
Ratio:_____4____5_____9
Multiplier:
Actual:_______________117
In the top row, we put the ratio of X:Y = 4:5.
The last column is the total: 4+5 = 9.
In the bottom row, we put any known values. The sum of X and Y is 117, so this number is put under "Total" in the bottom row.
To determine the middle row -- the multiplier -- we divide the known actual value (total = 117) by its corresponding value in the top row (9): 117/9 = 13. The multiplier is placed in every column along the middle row:
____________X____Y____Total
Ratio:_______4____5______9
Multiplier:__13__ 13_____13
Actual:__________________117
Now we can complete the box by multiplying every value in the top row by the multiplier:
____________X_____Y______Total
Ratio:_______4_____5_______9
Multiplier:__13____13_____13
Actual:____52____65______117
So after k has been added to both values, X=52 and Y=65. Now we can plug in the answer choices, which represent the value of k. When the correct answer choice is subtracted from 52 and 65, the ratio will be 3:4.
Only answer choice B works: k=13.
52-13 = 39.
65-13 = 52.
39/52 = 3/4. Success!
The correct answer is
B.
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