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| Question 110049:  A coffee merchant has coffee beans that sell for $9 per pound and $12 per pound. The two types are to be mixed to create 100 lb of a mixture that will sell for $11.25 per pound. How much of each type of bean should be used in the mixture?
 Thank you for your help!
 Answer by bucky(2189)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Let's pick this problem apart one step at a time. We'll begin by letting N represent the the number of pounds of coffee at Nine dollars a pound and T represent the number of pounds
 of coffee at Twelve dollars a pound.
 .
 As a rough check we can tell that T must be more than N. Why is that? because the final mixture
 must sell at $11.25 a pound ... and this price is closer to $12 a pound than it is to $9.00 a pound.
 [If N equaled T, we would expect the coffee mix to sell for $10.50 a pound, which is the price
 that is halfway between $9.00 a pound and $12.00 a pound.]
 .
 Now to the problem.  The total weight of the mix must be 100 pounds. Therefore, we know that
 N + T must equal 100.  In equation form this is:
 .
 
  .
 Next, we can tell that at $11.25 per pound the entire 100 pounds of mix must be worth
 $11.25 times 100 which equals $1125.00.
 .
 Of that total amount, the value of the $9.00 per pound coffee is $9 times the number of
 pounds of that coffee (which is N). So 9*N is the dollar amount of the $9 coffee in the mix.
 And the value of the of the $12.00 per pound coffee in the mix is 12*T. The combined
 value of the two coffees in the mix must add to $1125.00 and in equation form this is:
 .
 
  .
 By itself, this equation cannot be solved because it is a single equation and there are
 two unknowns ... N and T. But we can go back to the equation:
 .
 
  .
 and solve for one of the variables in terms of the other. For example, let's solve for
 N by subtracting T from both sides of the equation to get:
 .
 
  .
 The right side of this equation is equal to N so it can be substituted for N in the dollar
 equation. Start with:
 .
 
  .
 and replace N with 100 - T to get:
 .
 
  .
 Multiply out the left side to make it:
 .
 
  .
 Get rid of the 900 on the left side by subtracting 900 from both sides to reduce the equation to:
 .
 
  .
 Combine the two terms on the left side:
 .
 
  .
 Solve for T by dividing both sides by 3 and you have:
 .
 
  .
 This tells you that the 100 pounds of mix contains 75 pounds of the coffee that costs $12 per pound.
 .
 The remainder of the 100 pounds of mix must therefore be 25 pounds of the coffee that costs
 $9 per pound.
 .
 Check ... 25 pounds + 75 pounds = 100 pounds of mix.
 .
 And at $9 per pound, the 25 pounds of it in the mix is worth $9 * 25 = $225. Plus at
 $12 per pound, the 75 pounds of it in the mix is worth $12 * 75 = $900. So the total worth
 of the mix is $225 + $900 = $1125. Finally there are 100 lbs of the mix and at a total worth
 of $1125, the cost per pound should be $1125/100 = $11.25 and this is what the problem said
 it should be.
 .
 Everything checks. Therefore, you can say that the required mix consists of 25 pounds of
 the $9 per pound coffee and 75 pounds of the $12 per pound coffee.
 .
 Finally, note that there is more of the $12 per pound coffee in the mix than there is
 $9 per pound coffee just as we originally thought.
 .
 Hope this helps you to understand the problem.
 .
 
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