Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Bruce's coin, math, oct-13-09

Hey guys,

First of all I'll talk about my estimate to how much money is in the jar.
Compared to my estimate the difference from my estimate to the exact amount was a difference of $58.00.

Estimate= $100 American
Answer= $158 American
Difference= $ 58 dollars
__________________________________________________________________
How Many Coins Are in the Jar?
(American Jar)
Money Rolls Value

Pennies 1 cent - l,l x 4 =8 -$1
Nickels 5 cents - l,l x 4 =8 -$4

Dimes
10 cents - l,l x 4 = 8 - $10

Quarters
25 cents - l x 4 = 4 -$10
28 rolls $25 =$100.00


Redone Table

Money - Rolls - Coins in Roll -Total
1 cents - 8 - 50 - 400

5 cents - 8 - 40 - 320

10 cents - 8 - 50 - 400

25 cents - 4 - 40 - 160
There are 1280 totals coins


l = a single roll
Redone Table = means it's more exact

The data shows that there are 1280 coins in the American jar.


(Canadian Jar)
Money - Rolls - Value
1 cent - l,l - $1

5 cents - l,l - $4

10 cents - l,l - $10

25 cents - l,l - $10

$1 - l - $25

$2 - l - $50
= $100.00

Redone Table

Money - Rolls - Coins/Roll -Total
1 cents - l,l - 50 - 100

5 cents - l,l - 40 - 80

10 cents - l,l - 50 - 100

25 cents - l - 40 - 40

$ 1 - l - 25 - 25

$ 2 -l - 25 -25
There are 370 total coins

My conclusion states that there are 370 coins in the Canadian Jar.

____________________________________________________________

This is question is about...

How long will it take to fill the jar, if you put 1 coin in pair day.
The catch is that you start on January. 1 . 2010.

A full jar has about 1707 coins. If you round 1707 to the nearest hundred it would be 1700.You can find out one tenth of the jar by dividing 1700 by 10.One tenth of the jar would have about 170 coins. If you multiply this by 2 to get 2 tenths or 20 percent you get 340. 370 coins would fill up a little bit more than 20 percent or 2 tenths of the jar.


This is what I think the answer would be.

Thanks to Jomari for the help.



p.s. sorry if it looks messy.













4 comments:

  1. Good job Bruce, but I think you should have put a date on when the jar would be fully filled(good job on the math calculations though). I also think that you forgot to state how full the Canadian jar is.

    ReplyDelete
  2. good job! very detailed. if you start january 1, 2010 when are you going to stop when the jar is fully filled?

    ReplyDelete
  3. nicee... its really clear that you putted alot of thought to it.. keep up the good work bruce
    ! :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. good job you explained every thing well and you used some colour. you didnt have a picture and it looked like you skipped a lot of lines to make it look longer

    ReplyDelete

About This Blog

Lorem Ipsum

Statcounter

Calculator





powered by math calculator at calculator.net

  © Blogger templates Psi by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP