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Old February 26th 04, 09:26 PM
David Brooks
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This one has been around before

On Car Talk, about a year ago. The question was about the mechanics in the
Last Chance Garage wanting to know their *average* wages, so there was an
additional step. Dedicated NPR listeners should have no problem with this
one.

-- David Brooks

"Ash Wyllie" wrote in message
...
john smith opined

The Current Challenge (given February 22, 2004):


A private pilot has a four-seat plane, and he's offered to take three
friends up for a flight. To do his load and fuel calculations the pilot
needs to know the combined weight of his three passengers. Now, the
three passengers are sensitive about their weight, and none of them will
let anyone else know how much he weighs. And no scale at the flying club
is big enough to weigh more than one person at a time. How does the
pilot quickly get the accurate combined weight of the three passengers?


E-mail your answer to , or send a post card to:


PUZZLE
Weekend Edition Sunday
National Public Radio
635 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20001



This one has beeen aroound before. What you do is whisper a random number

to
person 1. He adds his weight to that number and whispers the result to

person
2. He and person 3 dothe same. Person 3 tells the pilot the result of his
calculation. The pilot then subtracts the original random number and comes

out
with the total of the passenger's weights.


-ash
Cthulhu for President!
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