215k views
1 vote
Car A's fuel efficiency is 34 miles per gallon of gasoline, and car B's fuel efficiency is 23 miles per gallon of gasoline. At those rates, how many more gallons of gasoline would car B consume than car A on a 1,564– mile trip?

1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

22 more gallons.

Explanation:

Given:

Car A's fuel efficiency is 34 miles per gallon of gasoline.

Car B's fuel efficiency is 23 miles per gallon of gasoline.

Question asked:

At those rates, how many more gallons of gasoline would car B consume than car A on a 1,564 miles trip?

Solution:

Car A's fuel efficiency is 34 miles per gallon of gasoline.

By unitary method:

Car A can travel 34 miles in = 1 gallon

Car A can travel 1 mile in =
(1)/(34) \ gallon

Car A can travel 1564 miles in =
(1)/(34) *1564=46\ gallons

Car B's fuel efficiency is 23 miles per gallon of gasoline.

Car B can travel 23 miles in = 1 gallon

Car B can travel 1 mile in =
(1)/(23) \ gallon

Car B can travel 1564 mile in =
(1)/(23) *1564=68\ gallons

We found that for 1564 miles trip Car A consumes 46 gallons of gasoline while Car B consumes 68 gallons of gasoline that means Car B consumes 68 - 46 = 22 gallons more gasoline than Car A.

Thus, Car B consumes 22 more gallons of gasoline than Car A consumes.

User Yoraco Gonzales
by
4.5k points