![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004):
A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pragmatic solution: tell them to stop being childish and just tell
me what they weigh, or else stay on the ground while I go flying and have some fun. Of course there are a number of mathematical solutions. Personally I wouldn't trust my passengers to do arithmetic correctly if my life depended on it! John "john smith" wrote in message ... The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"John Harper" wrote:
Personally I wouldn't trust my passengers to do arithmetic correctly if my life depended on it! Any Angel Flight pilot could tell you horror stories. -- Dan C172RG at BFM (remove pants to reply by email) |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
john smith wrote in news:vsw_b.21$OE4.9
@fe1.columbus.rr.com: The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 He simply cancels the flight because his aircraft cannot take all 4 up at once. The odds of 3 people being asked to go up in a plane together when all of them are concerned about being underweight are vanishingly small. Barring that they could go in to the room one at a time and weight then selves and write down the weight on a piece of paper and insert it into a slot in a lock box so no one could see the results until all 3 papers are in the box. The pilot adds up the numbers and has his total weight and no one know which wieght goes to which person. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In fact the problem is poorly formulated. The lockbox is
clearly the answer if they don't mind writing their weight down. Or Big John's solution is quite neat. Or you could have each passenger divide their weight into n unequal parts and write each part down separately, giving you 3n pieces of paper which you then sum. No doubt you could figure out how to use the Chinese Remainder Theorem if you wanted to... Or you could fly a 182 with half tanks - if they'll fit in the plane, you'll be OK. John "John Theune" wrote in message 1... john smith wrote in news:vsw_b.21$OE4.9 @fe1.columbus.rr.com: The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 He simply cancels the flight because his aircraft cannot take all 4 up at once. The odds of 3 people being asked to go up in a plane together when all of them are concerned about being underweight are vanishingly small. Barring that they could go in to the room one at a time and weight then selves and write down the weight on a piece of paper and insert it into a slot in a lock box so no one could see the results until all 3 papers are in the box. The pilot adds up the numbers and has his total weight and no one know which wieght goes to which person. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
John
1. Have each passenger pick up an unknown weight (suitcase, etc.) and weigh with it to get a gross weight. 2. After all three are weighed that way, add these gross figures to get a max gross weight of the group. 3. Take the 'added' weight (suitcases, etc.) each carried to get weighed and weigh the three to get the excess weight. 4. Subtract the extra weights total from the max gross total and the figure you get is the total passenger weight that can be used to figure W & B. May be a easier way but this will work and no individual will give away his weight. Big John On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 23:58:19 GMT, john smith wrote: The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
stand next to them and make an "educated guess".. guess high.. and if the
numbers don't work out.. tell them they can't fly until they prove they are below a set weight... ever want to be the weight guesser at the local carny? BT "john smith" wrote in message ... The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
john smith opined
The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004): A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers? E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to: PUZZLE Weekend Edition Sunday National Public Radio 635 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 This one has beeen aroound before. What you do is whisper a random number to person 1. He adds his weight to that number and whispers the result to person 2. He and person 3 dothe same. Person 3 tells the pilot the result of his calculation. The pilot then subtracts the original random number and comes out with the total of the passenger's weights. -ash Cthulhu for President! Why vote for a lesser evil? |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() What you do is whisper a random number to person 1. He adds his weight to that number and whispers the result to person 2. He and person 3 dothe same. Person 3 tells the pilot the result of his calculation. The pilot then subtracts the original random number and comes out with the total of the passenger's weights. This works as long as all passengers are good at math, and there are no telephone errors. The likelyhood of this is not something I want to contemplate. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Teacherjh wrote: What you do is whisper a random number to person 1. He adds his weight to that number and whispers the result to person 2. He and person 3 dothe same. Person 3 tells the pilot the result of his calculation. The pilot then subtracts the original random number and comes out with the total of the passenger's weights. This works as long as all passengers are good at math, and there are no telephone errors. Ok, then punch some random number into your calculator and have each passenger add in his/her weight on that. George Patterson A diplomat is a person who can tell you to go to hell in such a way that you look forward to the trip. |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Weekend IFR ground school with Aviation Seminars | Brad Z | Instrument Flight Rules | 1 | September 20th 04 03:05 PM |
19 Sep 2004 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Naval Aviation | 0 | September 19th 04 11:54 PM |
USS Liberty Challenge/Reward | Issac Goldberg | Naval Aviation | 75 | July 16th 04 09:28 PM |
The War's Lost Weekend | WalterM140 | Military Aviation | 32 | May 18th 04 07:42 AM |
FS: Aviation History Books | Neil Cournoyer | Military Aviation | 0 | August 26th 03 08:32 PM |