SOLUTION: a store mixes brazilian coffee worth $11 per kilogram and venezuelan coffee worth $14 per kilogram. The mixture is to sell for $13 per kilogram. Find how much of each should be use
Algebra.Com
Question 999995: a store mixes brazilian coffee worth $11 per kilogram and venezuelan coffee worth $14 per kilogram. The mixture is to sell for $13 per kilogram. Find how much of each should be used to make a 132-kilogram mixture
Answer by josgarithmetic(39618) (Show Source): You can put this solution on YOUR website!
Price is a concentration. Percent is also often used as a concentration. Look at another example demonstration using a single variable for one of the coffees.
video example same form as your exercise but just a different example. ONE variable used; two-part mixture.
All two-part mixture problems fitting this form can be handled this way (although you can also choose to use two variables instead of just one variable.)
RELATED QUESTIONS
A store mixes Brazilian coffee worth $11 per kilogram and Venezuelan coffee worth $14 per (answered by mananth)
a store mixes kenyan coffee worth $12 per kilogram and venezuelan coffee worth $14 per... (answered by josgarithmetic)
a store mixes Kenyan coffee worth $11 per kilogram and Venezuelan coffee worth $13 per... (answered by checkley77)
a store mixes kenyan coffee worth $11 per kilogram and venezuelan coffee worth $13 per... (answered by ewatrrr,mananth)
A store mixes Kenyan coffee worth $10 per kilogram and Venezuelan coffeee worth $12 per... (answered by stanbon)
A store mixes Brazilian coffee worth $11 per kilogram and Turkish coffee worth
$14 per... (answered by stanbon)
a store mixes brazilian coffee worth $11 per kilogram and turkish coffee worth $13... (answered by John10)
a store mixes kenyan coffee worth $12 per kilogram and Venezuelan coffee worth $16 per... (answered by jorel1380)
a store mixes kenyan coffee worth $12 per kilogram and venezuelan coffee worth $15 per... (answered by mananth)