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Pouring water VI. Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   rookie1ja Icon

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Posted 30 March 2007 - 06:02 PM

Pouring water VI. - Back to the Water and Weighing Puzzles
Given three bowls: bowl A (8 liters capacity) filled with 5 liters of water; bowl B (5 liters capacity) filled with 3 liters of water; and bowl C (3 liters capacity) filled with 2 liters of water.
Can you measure exactly 1 liter, by transferring the water only 2 times?



Spoiler for Solution:
Pouring Water VI. - solution
1st Pour 1 litre from bowl A to bowl C. Thus 4 litres are left in the bowl A and bowl C is full (3 litres).
2nd Pour 2 litres from bowl C to bowl B. Doing that you have full bowl B (5 litres) and there is 1 litre left in bowl C.

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#2 User is offline   jmo Icon

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Posted 25 June 2007 - 07:30 AM

this reminded me of the Die Hard With a Vengeance puzzle in the park, so I kept asking myself how can you be so sure that you're only pouring one liter? It made me through a bunch of solutions out the window. Good solution though.
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#3 User is offline   mrbojangles Icon

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Posted 27 June 2007 - 11:36 PM

got it
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#4 User is offline   Duff Icon

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Posted 06 July 2007 - 10:13 PM

1. top off bowl C with water from bowl A
2. top off bowl B with water from now full bowl C. What's left is in bowl C is 1L of water.
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#5 User is offline   wayne11 Icon

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Posted 09 July 2007 - 05:40 PM

Doesn't this solution go against the principles in all the other water jug problems?
The first step in the solution says to

Quote

Pour 1 litre from jug A into jug C.
How do you know how much 1 litre is?? And, if you could pour single litres out of jugs, why not just pour 1 litre out of the 3-litre jug and be finished in 1 step? Am i wrong?
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#6 User is offline   wayne11 Icon

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Posted 09 July 2007 - 05:42 PM

I just realized I was wrong indeed...
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#7 User is offline   bigbic Icon

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Posted 12 July 2007 - 05:07 AM

How do you know how much 1 litre is?? And, if you could pour single litres out of jugs, why not just pour 1 litre out of the 3-litre jug and be finished in 1 step? Am i wrong?

because being as C only has one liter of empty space in it, so long as you fill it up you are taking ONE liter away from what ever pitcher you used to pour into it. Same thing for the second step, pur 2 liters into B. B only has 2 liters of empty space in it so to filll it up you are taking 2 liters aways from C. C had three before this step, 3 - the 2 liters going into B and there you have it. 1 liter left in C
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#8 User is offline   harrylemmens Icon

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Posted 19 July 2007 - 12:30 PM

Alternatively you can use the following solution:
1. Fill C with B leaving 4 litres in B
2. Fill A with B leaving 1 litre in B.

Can't get easier than that


Oh BTW deplacing 1 litre implies that you can only fill the container with a max of 1 litre. There's no measuring involved here.
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#9 User is offline   bonanova Icon

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Posted 19 July 2007 - 06:51 PM

Quote

Alternatively you can use the following solution:
1. Fill C with B leaving 4 litres in B


B starts with 3 liters.
Filling C [takes 1 liter] leaves 2 [not 4] liters in B.
The greatest challenge to any thinker is stating the problem in a way that will allow a solution. - Bertrand Russell
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#10 User is offline   irakmae3 Icon

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Posted 09 October 2007 - 03:13 PM

You don't need B at all.
Fill C from A leaving 4 liters in A.
Dump out the water in C.
Then fill C from A again, leaving 1 Liter in A
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