News3 mins ago
Mensa Question Here.
48 Answers
A helicopter covers its outward journey at 330 mph. It returns over exactly the same distance at 165 mph. What is the helicopters average speed over the entire journey? The answer is 220, but how? I got these cards fun, but some are really hard! Thank you for your answers.
Answers
the length of the journey is irrelevant, that's the point of the question, to realise what are the salient factors, this is not primarily about the arithmetic. The journey back always takes double the journey there, let's call the distance D, the average speed A and the Time T, so the total journey takes 3T thus: A=2S/3
09:52 Fri 12th Mar 2021
Incidentally the fastest helicopter made is a Sikorsky & tops out at 299 mph. So the one in this example must have been wind assisted on it's outward run & against the wind on return.
Roughly speed 250 + 80 mph wind = 330 mph
250 - 80 mpf wind = 170 mph
(can't be bothered to work out the fractions!)
Roughly speed 250 + 80 mph wind = 330 mph
250 - 80 mpf wind = 170 mph
(can't be bothered to work out the fractions!)
The question does not say what the length of the journey is. The helicopter could have taken anything from 5 minutes to 5 hours to complete its journey at 330mph. So the distance is variable.
In my opinion the answer is wrong (unless we have not had the correct question.) I'm sure someone can do a calculation on paper but I would have thought that the answer would be ( 330 + 165) / 2 = 245.5.
In my opinion the answer is wrong (unless we have not had the correct question.) I'm sure someone can do a calculation on paper but I would have thought that the answer would be ( 330 + 165) / 2 = 245.5.
the length of the journey is irrelevant, that's the point of the question, to realise what are the salient factors, this is not primarily about the arithmetic. The journey back always takes double the journey there, let's call the distance D, the average speed A and the Time T, so the total journey takes 3T thus: A=2S/3
davebro's first post shows the intuititvely obvious way to do this. The working in full is shown below:
Speed = Distance / Time, i.e. S = D / T
Journey 1:
330 = D / T
therefore D = 330T
Journey 2:
165 = D / t2
where t2 is the time for the second journey, and D is the same distance as the first journey
therefore t2 = 330T / 165
So t2 = 2T
Average:
Speed = (Distance out + Distance back) / (Time Out + Time Back)
S = (D + D) / (T + 2T)
= 2D / 3T
= 660T / 3T
= 220
Speed = Distance / Time, i.e. S = D / T
Journey 1:
330 = D / T
therefore D = 330T
Journey 2:
165 = D / t2
where t2 is the time for the second journey, and D is the same distance as the first journey
therefore t2 = 330T / 165
So t2 = 2T
Average:
Speed = (Distance out + Distance back) / (Time Out + Time Back)
S = (D + D) / (T + 2T)
= 2D / 3T
= 660T / 3T
= 220
Yes. A remembeer a problem like this from night school
http:// www.iba nkingfa q.com/i ntervie wing-br ainteas ers/a-c ar-trav els-a-d istance -of-60- miles-a t-an-av eage-sp eed-of- 30-mph- how-fas t-would -the-ca r-have- to-trav el-the- same-60 -mile-d istance -home-t o-avera ge-60-m ph-over -the-en tire-tr ip/#:~: text=Mo st%20pe ople%20 say%209 0%20mph ,hours% 20(120% 2F60).
http://