DS Practice test question #6

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by California4jx » Fri Aug 29, 2008 11:49 am
Answer: C ($200)

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by parallel_chase » Fri Aug 29, 2008 6:53 pm
Answer should be $150

1000 - 0.5
2000 - 1.0
4000 - 1.5
3000 - 1.5

I am getting values around 135.

The maximum value should be 150.

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by lunarpower » Fri Aug 29, 2008 11:21 pm
parallel_chase wrote:Answer should be $150

1000 - 0.5
2000 - 1.0
4000 - 1.5
3000 - 1.5

I am getting values around 135.

The maximum value should be 150.
your numbers aren't quite right. you should double-check the table.
should be
0.5% of $1000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $2000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $3000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $4000 (from 6000-10,000).
that's 5 + 20 + 45 + 80, or 150.
Ron has been teaching various standardized tests for 20 years.

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by missionmba » Sat Aug 30, 2008 12:26 am
I was thinking for max bonus the solution should be

0.5% of $1,000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $3,000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $6,000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $10,000 (from 6000-10,000).

=> 5 + 30 + 90 + 200 = 325

can someone pls explain
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by ddm » Sat Aug 30, 2008 4:18 pm
I agree with MissionMba.....

Although it would be better if someone could explain the problem in detail.

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by parallel_chase » Sat Aug 30, 2008 4:25 pm
missionmba wrote:I was thinking for max bonus the solution should be

0.5% of $1,000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $3,000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $6,000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $10,000 (from 6000-10,000).

=> 5 + 30 + 90 + 200 = 325

can someone pls explain
1000+3000+6000+10000 = $20000

What you did is an ideal GMAT trap for this question.

If you calculate your total amount it exceeds $10000


The question say bonus is payed on first 1000, next 2000 and so on upto 10000.

The total should never exceed 10000.

Therefore the maximum bonus payed is 150.

0.5% of $1000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $2000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $3000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $4000 (from 6000-10,000).

1000+2000+3000+3000+4000 = 10000
$5 + $20 + $45 + $80 = $150

Hope this helps.

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by lunarpower » Sat Aug 30, 2008 10:10 pm
parallel_chase wrote:
missionmba wrote:I was thinking for max bonus the solution should be

0.5% of $1,000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $3,000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $6,000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $10,000 (from 6000-10,000).

=> 5 + 30 + 90 + 200 = 325

can someone pls explain
1000+3000+6000+10000 = $20000

What you did is an ideal GMAT trap for this question.

If you calculate your total amount it exceeds $10000


The question say bonus is payed on first 1000, next 2000 and so on upto 10000.

The total should never exceed 10000.

Therefore the maximum bonus payed is 150.

0.5% of $1000 (from 0-1000),
1.0% of $2000 (from 1000-3000),
1.5% of $3000 (from 3000-6000),
2.0% of $4000 (from 6000-10,000).

1000+2000+3000+3000+4000 = 10000
$5 + $20 + $45 + $80 = $150

Hope this helps.
there's definitely a mistake, but i don't think you've identified it correctly; i don't think the above poster intended to add together $1000, $3000, $6000, and $10,000. i think the poster was doing the following:
WRONG approach! do not follow!
0.5% of $1000 = $5
1.0% of $3000 = $30
1.5% of $6000 = $90
2.0% of $10,000 = $200
the weirdest thing about this approach is that the answer that it gives, $325, isn't even one of the answer choices.

make sure that you hunt through the wording of the problem for the exact words that tell you that this is really what you should be doing. in particular, this problem contains the following:
"a 0.5% bonus is paid on the first $1000 charged; a 1.0% bonus is charged on the NEXT $2000 charged; ..."

that NEXT is the key word here; that word indicates, specifically, that the 1.0% does not apply to the $1000 for which a 0.5% bonus was already credited; that the 1.5% does not apply to the $3000 for which the 0.5% and 1.0% bonuses were already credited; etc.
Ron has been teaching various standardized tests for 20 years.

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