Calculating 25 minutes by burning 2 inconsistently burning 1-hour ropes

You are given two ropes and are told that they burn at inconsistent rates, but will always take 1 hour to completely burn up. This means that cutting one of the ropes perfectly in half will not give you two smaller 30-minute ropes.

You are told that you need to approximately calculate 25 minutes by burning these ropes in some fashion.

How do you accomplish this?


Hint:

first ½ of hint

I carefully chose approximately instead of precisely

second ½ of hint

because to calculate it precisely would require that you ignite an infinite number of flames

  • MrMusAddictOPM
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    12 years ago

    Good suggestion! That would work well if the ropes burned consistently, but it’s possible that those 5/12 portions are more/less volatile than the remainders, meaning they could burn for 25 minutes, but also they could burn for 10 minutes, or 50.

    • @ascallion
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      2 years ago

      Ah, very tricky. I’m not very good at math, so my next idea is to brute force it by unraveling both ropes into their individual threads, counting up 5/12ths of each ropes’ threads and re-tying and burning those threads. Each thread would be the same length as the original rope and would have the same inconsistencies, you’d just be left with a skinnier rope that hopefully has 25min of material left to burn between the two.

      Hopefully somebody figures out the real answer and can chime in, ::: I’m curious how lighting multiple fires helps :::

      • MrMusAddictOPM
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        22 years ago

        Waited 24 hours in case anyone could figure it out. I’ve posted the solution as it’s own top comment.