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13 December, 22:16

A grocer wants to mix two kinds of coffee. One kinds sells for $1.15 per pound, the other sells for $1.40 per pound. He wants to mix a total of 30 pounds and sell it for $1.35 per pound. How many pounds of each kind should he use in the new mix

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  1. 14 December, 01:17
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    Step-by-step explanation:

    Let the amounts (weights) of the $1.15 mix and the $1.40 mix be c and d.

    Then c + d = 30 lb. We can solve this for c, obtaining d = 30 - c.

    The cost equation is ($1.15/lb) c + ($1.40/lb) d = ($1.35/lb) (30 lb)

    Substituting 30 - c for d, we get:

    ($1.15/lb) c + ($1.40/lb) (30 - c) = ($1.35/lb) (30 lb). Solve this for c:

    1.15c + 42.00 - 1.40c = 40.5.

    Then - 0.25c = 40.5 - 42.0, or - 1.5.

    Finally, - 0.25c = - 1.50. This yields c = 6.

    If c = 6 lb, then (30 - 6) lb = d = 24 lb.

    Need 24 lb of the $1.15/lb kind and 6 lb of the $1.40/lb kind.
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