~The BrAiN tEaSeR Thread~

Status
Not open for further replies.
Cut one of the ropes in half and then burn them.

Hmmmm, but I guess you said that there's no uniform burn, though...

-TNC
 
Cut one of the ropes in half and then burn them.

Hmmmm, but I guess you said that there's no uniform burn, though...

-TNC

You answerred yourself. As they do not burn uniformly, length does not equal time.
 
Here is another riddle.

You have 2 peices of rope which will each burn in exactly 30 minutes. However, there is no correlation betwen the two ropes and they do not burn uniformly. Therefore 1/4 of the rope could burn in 28 minutes and the rest in 2 minutes.

So how do you tell using the ropes and a lighter when 45 minutes have passed?
set one completely alight...

wait for it to finish, then set the other one alight on both ends
 
Ok that is correct.

Now imagine the ropes burn in 60 minutes and not 30.
 
so that's two ropes that burn for an hour and we half to know when 45 minutes passes right?
 
set on alight from both ends to get 30 mins...

then set the next one alight at both ends and also in teh middle to get the remainding 15 mins perhaps?
 
set on alight from both ends to get 30 mins...

then set the next one alight at both ends and also in teh middle to get the remainding 15 mins perhaps?

That does not work because you do not know where the middle is given the length does not equal time principle.
 
why not cut the second rope in half. burn one section at both ends, wait then burn the other section at both ends.
 
why not cut the second rope in half. burn one section at both ends, wait then burn the other section at both ends.

No cutting - they are made of some material you cannot cut but you can burn.

Plus again half is meaningless given length does not equal time.
 
i don't know if this will work but

if you start burning both ropes at the same time but rope number one is on fire from both sides....then when one burns out, then start burning the other side of rope numero two?
 
i don't know if this will work but

if you start burning both ropes at the same time but rope number one is on fire from both sides....then when one burns out, then start burning the other side of rope numero two?

That is correct. Well done.
 
based on the simplicity of their only being two ropes, there are only so many different things one can do with that type of puzzle.

that's a nice sized brain teaser...
 
Riddle 71: The Gameshow*

You are on a gameshow. You have three doors to choose from (numbers 1, 2 and 3). Behind two of these doors are donkeys (one per door), and behind the remaining door is a brand new car.

You pick one of the doors, and it remains closed. The host then opens one of the donkey-doors, leaving two closed doors. This means that one of the doors conceals a donkey, and the other a car. You are given the opportunity to either stick with your initial choice or switch.

To get the car, do you stick with the initial door or do you switch, and why?

*If you've ever answered this question before or simply know the answer, please don't respond; it's a common question among statistics students.
 
I'm going to let someone else answer this. I've been through it a few times.
 
You stick with it, because it's not like your odds have changed. It's still a 1/3 shot.
 
I'm going to let someone else answer this. I've been through it a few times.
Hell, I've argued over this with people (and I was right). It's hard to wrap your mind around at first. Same principle with Deal or No Deal, actually. :up: A very cool concept.
 
Fine then! :mad:
I got assigned this in a math class...I was the only one in the class to actually solve it, but it's because I'm obsessive. This is a damn tough problem. I answered as you did at first. :up:
 
...wait, what? :confused:

the one about the donkey doors and the car. I'm just trying to think of the most unlikely trick answer.

i mean the answer can't be "inital choice" or "switch". It has to be something no one would think.
 
the one about the donkey doors and the car. I'm just trying to think of the most unlikely trick answer.

i mean the answer can't be "inital choice" or "switch". It has to be something no one would think.
No, it's one of the two choices. You just have to explain why.
 
Switch because when you first choose you had a 1/3 in chance, but by switching you have a 1/2 chance....
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread

Staff online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,268
Messages
22,076,932
Members
45,876
Latest member
Crazygamer3011
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"