mschwrtz Wrote:5) The point of the mixture-problem table in the WT guide is to produce two equations with the same two variables, which you can then solve algebraically. Those equations are the same as the equations produced by the more explicitly algebraically approach you've seen in the FDP book.
6) For this problem, the equations would be
x+y=100
.4x+.25y=35
solve for y/(x+y)
emailnaik,
Go back and take a look at Michael's excellent answer, particularly his last two points. We want to obtain two equations using the same two variables, so they can be combined to solve for the variables.
In this case, x is the percentage amount of the old mixture and y is the percentage amount of the new mixture. x + y will equal 100, or 100% of the new mixture.
Looking at the second equation, we know that x has a 40% solution and y has a 25% solution. We know that combining the two into the new mixture has a result of a 35% solution. Thus, .40x + .25y = 35.
Now, we can say that if x+y=100, x=100-y and plus that into our second equation, solving for x. Once we have a value for x, we can plug it back in and easily obtain a value for y.
Finally, we know that the new solution's percentage of y is the amount of y divided by the total of the entire solution (amount of x+y). There's our answer.
I hope this helps. There was another excellent point made about x contributing 40% and y contributing 25%, and the resulting 35% obviously coming from a larger portion of x than y. You can often ballpark the problem very successfully using this approach.