276,662 views
16 votes
16 votes
A manufacturer of chocolate chips would like to know whether its bag filling machine works correctly at the 436 gram setting. It is believed that the machine is underfilling the bags. A 28 bag sample had a mean of 433 grams with a standard deviation of 23. A level of significance of 0.05 will be used. Assume the population distribution is approximately normal. Is there sufficient evidence to support the claim that the bags are underfilled

User Marius Kjeldahl
by
3.2k points

1 Answer

22 votes
22 votes

Answer:

There is no sufficient evidence

Explanation:

The hypothesis :

H0 : μ = 436

H1 : μ < 436

Xbar = 433

s = 23

Sample size, n = 28

The test statistic :

(xbar - μ) ÷ (s/√(n))

(433 - 436) ÷ (23/√(28))

-3 ÷ 4.3465914

Test statistic = - 0.690

The Pvalue, calculated from test statistic value, df = n - 1 = 28 - 1 = 27

Pvalue = 0.248

Pvalue > α ; Hence, we fail to reject the null and conclude that there is no sufficient evidence to support the claim that the bags are underfilled

User AskNilesh
by
3.4k points