HPengineer wrote:my issue is that i always start rate problems with the equation below...
R(T) = W from here is where i got messed up...
They tell us that there are 10 machines working at constant rate.. and for them together to complete 1 job it takes 16 hours...
So i create the equation R*(16) = 1 job which R = 1/16... i took this as the rate for each machine individually...
i guess i don't understand why you multiplied by 10 as the rate to 160 hours?? maybe a bit more details please?
Here, we don't need to calculate the rate, it is constant. We need to find the time taken by 8 machines to complete the job, working at the same rate as 16 machines.
We can do this by ratio-proportion method also.
Machines :
Time
10 : 16 hrs
8 : x hrs
Note: This is the case of inverse variation, as increasing the no. of workers would decrease the time taken.
So, 10/8 = x/16, which when solved gives x = 20 hours.
Does this help?