Ask Question
19 August, 19:07

3 assembly lines can fill 24 orders for a shipping company in 10 hours. At the same rate, how many orders could 7 assembly lines fill in 5 hours for the company?

+1
Answers (2)
  1. 19 August, 20:02
    0
    3 assembly lines can fill 24 orders in 10 hours, therefore in 1 hour 3 assembly lines can fill 2.4 orders (24/10), consequently, 1 assembly line can fill 0.8 orders (2.4/3) in 1 hour. Therefore, 7 assembly lines can fill 5.6 (7*0.8) orders in an hour and thus the 7 assembly lines in 5 hours would fill (5.6 * 5) = 28 orders.

    Therefore, the answer is 28 orders
  2. 19 August, 22:11
    0
    28. This is because each assembly line makes 8 orders for ten hours. That means for every hour, an assembly can make 0.8 orders. When you multiply that by 5 hours and 7 assembly lines you get 28 orders
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “3 assembly lines can fill 24 orders for a shipping company in 10 hours. At the same rate, how many orders could 7 assembly lines fill in 5 ...” in 📙 Mathematics if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers