The Coin Problem

jmb

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Apr 12, 2006
20,995
10,525
113
Thread mash. How many of these coins will
It take to buy a used luxury car.
 
  • Funny
Reactions: Clonedogg

Drew0311

Well-Known Member
Nov 7, 2019
9,089
13,777
113
51
Norwalk, Iowa
I just eye balled it and said 4. Then tried to math it and failed. So when I saw four wasn’t an answer I knew I was wrong. Then got proven right. I drank way to much last night for this ****.
 

Steve

Well-Known Member
Apr 11, 2006
4,211
778
113
What is easily missed is that the small coin path is not around the circumference of the large coin. It is actually around the sum of the radius of the large coin plus the radius of the small coin.
 

dafarmer

Well-Known Member
Mar 17, 2012
7,265
6,947
113
SW Iowa
Problem shows radius of 3 and 1 inch. Circumference of 3 divided by 1 = 3. Put it on a flat surface. The radius of a 3 inch circle is .478 and radius of a 1 inch circle is .159.
 
Last edited:

JustBecause

Member
Oct 21, 2021
17
28
13
Problem shows radius of 3 and 1 inch. Circumference of 3 divided by 1 = 3. Put it on a flat surface. The radius of a 3 inch circle is .478 and radius of a 1 inch circle is .159.
The answer would be 3 if it was on a flat surface. It’s 4 because it’s not a flat surface.
 

FDWxMan

Well-Known Member
Jan 31, 2009
3,131
1,124
113
Des Moines
Think about it from the perspective of the center of the small coin.

Yes, its circumference is 1. If you roll it on a flat surface for three inches, the center travels 3 inches, in a straight line

But think about how far the center is traveling when it goes around the big circle. The center is now traveling in a circle, and that circle's circumference has changed.

Instead of moving in just a straight line, equal to the circumference of itself 2*pi*r = 1, the center is now moving in a circle with a circumference of 2*pi*(R+1) = whatever (more than 1). That is where the extra movement is coming from.
 
Last edited:

Die4Cy

Well-Known Member
Jan 2, 2010
14,972
15,857
113
This gave me a headache.
View attachment 107389
Working-For-The-Man.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: Acylum

Acylum

Well-Known Member
Nov 18, 2006
14,349
15,031
113
Think about it from the perspective of the center of the small coin.

Yes, its circumference is 1. If you roll it on a flat surface for three inches, the center travels 3 inches, in a straight line

But think about how far the center is traveling when it goes around the big circle. The center is now traveling in a circle, and that circle's circumference has changed.

Instead of moving in just a straight line, equal to the circumference of itself 2*pi*r = 1, the center is now moving in a circle with a circumference of 2*pi*(R+1) = whatever (more than 1). That is where the extra movement is coming from.
This is the explanation I found which then took me down the sidereal orbital period rabbit hole.
 

dafarmer

Well-Known Member
Mar 17, 2012
7,265
6,947
113
SW Iowa
Circumference is 3, doesn’t make any difference about the center. Put a 3 inch line on a surface and a 1 inch line next to it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JustBecause

tm3308

Well-Known Member
Jun 13, 2010
8,192
1,609
113
**** this. Just give me the damn coins so I can do my laundry.
 

Rogue52

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Oct 20, 2006
8,970
3,607
113
Cedar Rapids, IA
Please tell me there was someone who missed out on a perfect SAT score because he left the answer blank and got everything else correct.