rkim81 Wrote:Hi two questions, I got this same question on my MGMAT CAT #3, is there a reason why the first poster got it on the 6th and I got it on the 3rd? This was one of the last questions, that I guessed to my benefit correctly.
The GMAT exam is adaptive. That means that there is a big pool of questions and the algorithm selects questions for you based on your demonstrated ability (i.e. how you've answered previous questions), the mix of PS/DS you've seen on a given exam, the mix of topics you've already seen on a given exam, and even (within these and other parameters) randomly. You just happened to see it on your 3rd exam, but anyone can see it at different points or maybe not at all.
By the way, this is why we want people to post the first few words of a question as the subject, rather than posting the exam/question # it was for them.
rkim81 Wrote:Now for the mathematics. I understand that you have to make an RTD chart and come up with the equation 3t+2t+20=20pie. But why do you add 10 again after you've already solved? You've already added 10 to the time of Car B, isn't this adding the time twice?
The first time Nitin used the 10 hours for Car B, it was to figure out where on the track B was at the time when A started driving. He was essentially "resetting" the question so he could start from the time when Car A began, as if both cars were starting simultaneously.
He then calculates the time from the simultaneous beginning to the meeting time to get the total time that passed while both were in motion. This is Car A's total time, but
10 hours less than Car B's time, since it ignors the 10 hour reset we did earlier.
If it were Car A's distance that mattered, we would just use this time. But since it is Car B's distance, we need to add 10 back to it's time.
I think you are thinking of it as an advance of 10 hours for B and then another advance of 10 hours. If fact, we took 10 hours
away from B at the beginning (by assuming the distance it travelled was already done), so we have to give those 10 hours (and that already-travelled distance) back.