Question 347795:  A manufacture claims that 5% of the finished items coming off an assembly line each dat are defective. A total of 5,000 items are produced a day, and 3 are randomly selected and inspected.
 
a. If the manufacturer's claim is correct, what is the probability all 3 randomly selected items are defective?
 
b. If all 3 randomly selected items are defective, would you infer the manufacturer's claim is incorrect? why?
 
c. if the manufacturer's claim is correct, what is the probability none of the 3 items are defective?
 
d. If none of the 3 items are defective, would you infer that the manufacturer's claim is incorrect? why? 
 Answer by stanbon(75887)      (Show Source): 
You can  put this solution on YOUR website! A manufacture claims that 5% of the finished items coming off an assembly line each day are defective. A total of 5,000 items are produced a day, and 3 are randomly selected and inspected. 
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a. If the manufacturer's claim is correct, what is the probability all 3 randomly selected items are defective? 
(0.05)^3 = 0.000125  
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b. If all 3 randomly selected items are defective, would you infer the manufacturer's claim is incorrect?  
why? 
No; the probability that would happen is extremely low. 
The defect rate is probably higher. 
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If the manufacturer's claim is correct, what is the probability none of the 3 items are defective? 
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0.95^3 = 0.8574 
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d. If none of the 3 items are defective, would you infer that the manufacturer's claim is incorrect?  
why? 
His claim has not really been tested.  You would have no reason to 
doubt it. 
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Cheers, 
Stan H. 
 
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