Martha bought several pencils. If each pencil was either a 23 cent pencil or a 21 pencil, how many 23 cent pencils did

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Martha bought several pencils. If each pencil was either a 23 cent pencil or a 21 pencil, how many 23 cent pencils did Martha buy?

(1) Martha bought a total of 6 pencils.

(2) The total value of the pencils Martha bought was 130 cents.

Answer: B

Source: GMAT Prep
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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Gmat_mission wrote:
Tue Mar 23, 2021 8:07 am
Martha bought several pencils. If each pencil was either a 23 cent pencil or a 21 pencil, how many 23 cent pencils did Martha buy?

(1) Martha bought a total of 6 pencils.

(2) The total value of the pencils Martha bought was 130 cents.

Answer: B

Source: GMAT Prep
Target question: How many 23 cent pencils did Martha buy?

Given: Martha bought several pencils. Each pencil was either a 23-cent pencil or a 21-cent pencil.

Statement 1: Martha bought a total of 6 pencils
Clearly, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: The total value of the pencils Martha bought was 130 cents.
This statement APPEARS to be insufficient. However, since the pencils cost 21 cents and 23 cents, we can't buy many for 130 cents.
So, let's LIST THE POSSIBLE CASES

Case a: Martha bought ZERO 23-cent pencils (for a total of 0 cents).
This means she spent all 130 cents on the 21-cent pencils. However, 21 cents does not evenly divide into 130 cents
So, it cannot be the case that Martha bought ZERO 23-cent pencils

Case b: Martha bought ONE 23-cent pencil.
This means she spent the remaining 107 cents on the 21-cent pencils. However, 21 cents DOES NOT evenly divide into 107 cents.
So, it cannot be the case that Martha bought ONE 23-cent pencil

Case c: Martha bought TWO 23-cent pencils (for a total of 46 cents).
This means she spent the remaining 84 cents on the 21-cent pencils. 21 cents divides into 84 cents exactly FOUR TIMES.
So, it's possible that Martha bought TWO 23-cent pencils and FOUR 21-cent pencils
In this case, the answer to the target question is Martha bought TWO 23-cent pencils

Case d: Martha bought THREE 23-cent pencils (for a total of 69 cents).
This means she spent the remaining 61 cents on the 21-cent pencils. However, 21 cents DOES NOT evenly divide into 61 cents.
So, it cannot be the case that Martha bought THREE 23-cent pencils

Case e: Martha bought FOUR 23-cent pencils (for a total of 92 cents).
This means she spent the remaining 38 cents on the 21-cent pencils. However, 21 cents DOES NOT evenly divide into 38 cents.
So, it cannot be the case that Martha bought FOUR 23-cent pencils

Case f: Martha bought FIVE 23-cent pencils (for a total of 15 cents).
This means she spent the remaining 15 cents on the 21-cent pencils. However, 21 cents DOES NOT evenly divide into 15 cents.
So, it cannot be the case that Martha bought FIVE 23-cent pencils

Now that we've examined all of the cases, the only possible solution is the one described in case c
So, it MUST be the case that Martha bought TWO 23-cent pencils
Since we can answer the target question with certainty, statement 2 is SUFFICIENT

Answer: B

Cheers,
Brent
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
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