+pizzachef Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 I reckon there's a buncha smart people here. Has anyone seen this and figured it out? Yes I admit, I'm an engineer and this goofy little puzzle stumps me...flame all you want []. Click here for the puzzle. Sorry about the link not working...friggin geocities. Try to paste this URL into the address bar up there: www.geocities.com/geoffreyforest/puzzling.jpg I think for it to work right...you have to physically paste or type the address in. [This message was edited by pizzachef on August 14, 2002 at 11:40 AM.] Quote Link to comment
+Nurse Dave Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 Clicked on the link and it said the page was unavailable. ---I will stand out, I am a raven in the snow. Quote Link to comment
Gromit Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 Hint: The slope on the greenish triangle is steeper than the slope on the red triangle. -Gromit [This message was edited by Gromit on August 14, 2002 at 10:46 AM.] Quote Link to comment
irvingdog Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 that you have a bad link. To provide a good like, find a functioning URL, copy it, click the URL button, highlight the area and paste in the functioning URL, click o.k. type in any mesage you want, click o.k. and you are done. Puzzle solved! It's a game folks.......... Quote Link to comment
+Nurse Dave Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 The link works if you knock off the .jpg part. I think the question is the two triangle have the same measurements, how can the volumes be different which is implied by the empty square. ---I will stand out, I am a raven in the snow. Quote Link to comment
blahginger Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 To expand on what gromit said: The overall shapes are not really triangles. The "hypotenuse" on the top shape bends inwards while the on one the bottom bends outward. the difference is slight. ____________________________ The true traveler is he who goes on foot, and even then, he sits down a lot of the time. - Colette Quote Link to comment
+pizzachef Posted August 14, 2002 Author Share Posted August 14, 2002 try drawing the shape on graph paper...with STRAIGHT edges..it comes out the same. What I did was look at the areas...the areas of 2 triangles and the two odd shapes. The area of all the shapes added together is 32. Even with the one with the hole...the area of the shaded shapes is still 32, but add the hole in and you get 33! Even more wierd...the area of the entire big triangle is 32.5!!!! -pizzachef Quote Link to comment
blahginger Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 If by "straight" you mean you drew a straight line between the upper right and lower left corners of the overall shape. Then look carefully at your drawing. The 'midpoint' of the hypotenuse (where the two smaller triangles meet) will not cross directly over the coordinates on your graph paper. If it does, try using a thinner pencil. - OR - Redraw the picture with larger (but proportional shapes) (i.e instead of the smaller triangle being 5 x 2 make it 25 x 10. Quote Link to comment
Dinoprophet Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 If you look closely at the two small triangles, you will see that their angles are not the same; the blue one has a slope of 3/8, or 15/40; the red has 2/5, or 16/40. As such, they do not form a straight edge for the hypotenuse of the complete triangle. The top shape actually bows inward where the blue and red meet, the bottom bows outward. With that in mind, imagine a line from the tip of each of the conglomerate triangles, the *true* hypotenuse. The area of this triangle is: A = .5*13*5 = 32.5 Now, subtract from that the area of the individual small shapes (in the top "triangle"), and you get the area of the triangle formed by the real hypotenuse and that of the two small triangles in the top shape (empty space) A = 32.5-7-8-(.5*5*2)-(.5*3*8) = 0.5 Double that value, since an equal amount bulges out of the bottom shape, and there is your missing 1.0 unit. Quote Link to comment
+JetSkier Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 The angles of the green and red triangles are slightly different. It's an illusion that together they form a straight line. Start at the top right of each shape and go left 5 and down 2. On the top one, you'll end up right on a grid intersection but not on the bottom one. That's proof that the two triangles have different angles. Quote Link to comment
+kimbest Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 Look at the point where the red and green triangles meet in the first figure. Call it point D. Now look for point D in the second figure. You will see it is slightly inside the red triangle. Now draw a line from point D to the top point of the red triangle. Draw a second line from point D to the left most point of the green triangle. If you cut along these two lines, you will have a long slender sliver, whose volume is the save as the little square gap at the bottom. Quote Link to comment
+pizzachef Posted August 14, 2002 Author Share Posted August 14, 2002 the slopes are so close, nonetheless, they're not equal. 2/5 is NOT 3/8 WHen I tried cutting otu the shapes and doing it by hand, I guess I assumed the mismatch was my error. That's what happens when we assume Thanks for the help! Everyone can now rest assured that I'll NEVER make that mistake when I'm designing a bridge that you might cross one day -pizzachef Quote Link to comment
+phantom4099 Posted August 14, 2002 Share Posted August 14, 2002 Here is onw of my fav to cut out and show people. http://www.funsilly.com/leprechaun.html Wyatt W. The probability of someone watching you is directly proportional to the stupidity of your actions. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.