Question 1083698:  4. A light bulb manufacturer produces bulbs which have a mean life of 1400 hours and a standard deviation of 200 hours. Assuming a normal distribution.
 
(i) What proportion of scores would be expected to have a life of between 1600 and 1900 hours? 
(ii) What number of hours of life can the manufacturer guarantee so that there are no more than 2% 
rejects? 
(iii) What percentage of light bulbs would have a life of more than 1850 hours? 
 Answer by mathmate(429)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! Question: 
A light bulb manufacturer produces bulbs which have a mean life of 1400 hours and a standard deviation of 200 hours. Assuming a normal distribution.  
(i) What proportion of scores would be expected to have a life of between 1600 and 1900 hours? 
(ii) What number of hours of life can the manufacturer guarantee so that there are no more than 2% 
rejects? 
(iii) What percentage of light bulbs would have a life of more than 1850 hours? 
  
Solution. 
All questions are based on the normal distribution with parameters N(0,1), i.e. mean, mu = 0, standard deviation, sigma = 1. 
  
All data should be normalized to the distribution N(0,1) to use the normal distribution table. 
Normalized value is 
Z=(X-mean)/sigma=(X-1400)/200 
then P(X<=Z) can be found from the probability table. 
(for example, http://www.stat.ufl.edu/~athienit/Tables/Ztable.pdf) 
  
(i)  
Z(1600 hours)=(1600-1400)/200=1 
Z(1900 hours)=(1900-1400)/200=2.5 
P(1600<= X <= 1900)=Z(1900)-Z(1600)=P(2.5)-P(1)=0.9938-0.8413=0.1524 
  
(ii) 
Assume N hours will give an expected defective percentage of 0.02, then 
P(X P(Z=2.054) from table. 
Therefore 
(N-1400)/200=2.054 => N=1400+200*2.054=1810.75 hours 
  
(iii) 
X=1850, Z=(1850-1400)/200=2.25 
P(x<=X)=P(Z<2.25)=0.9878
 
  
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