May SAT 2011: Math Section

<p>This is the official discussion thread for the math section.</p>

<p>My Grid-in answers: </p>

<p>1
165
3.84 <- Last questions</p>

<p>thats all i remember lol</p>

<p>Last one for section 8 I think is… A^3/2…</p>

<p>Mb question was 0 and for the 1-10 integer quadrant 2 question I put 0, not sure if integers implied negative numbers?</p>

<p>yea i got A^ 3/2. do any of you remember the number 8 before the grid in?</p>

<p>i hope it was A^3/2, because that’s what I put.</p>

<p>cortana i had the same.</p>

<p>really hoping for an 800.</p>

<p>Did you guys get 9/5 for that math question with like 3b/6a=9/6 or something like that I don’t really remember the question.</p>

<p>Does anyone remember what the answer to the number over 500 one was?
The digits were like 3,6,7,8. I feel like I got that wrong.</p>

<p>bandgeek i got 18 but I’m pretty sure it’s wrong.</p>

<p>@bandgeek156 it was 18. There are 6 possible combinations for having 8 7 or 6 as the hundreds digit and 3 violates the rule so it was 6x3</p>

<p>@jetfan i got 9/5</p>

<p>A^3/2, quadrant one was 0, horizontal line was 0, 9/5 is correct, the over 500 one was 3<em>3</em>2=18.</p>

<p>Do you guys remember if 18 was which choice?.. This test killed me.</p>

<p>18 was choice C</p>

<p>was A^3/2 choice D or E?</p>

<p>The last grid-in was as follows: Someone bought coffee and beef for 9.60. Coffee costs twice as much as beef. She bought 3 times as much beef as coffee. How much did the coffee cost?</p>

<p>What was the answer?</p>

<p>a^3/2 was E</p>

<p>The coffee one was 3.84</p>

<p>A^3/2 was choice E if i remember correctly</p>

<p>I don’t know, I got $1.37 which was the example for gridding that they gave in the question so I’m almost certain I was wrong…</p>

<p>What did you guys for the mx+b question. I got 0 but I realized 0 couldn’t be answer because it didn’t fit in the grid in</p>

<p>Okay, here’s another grid-in. Idr the answer.</p>

<p>The product of three different prime numbers is n. Their sum is also a prime number. What is the smallest value of n?</p>

<p>I got two wrong so far. haha.</p>

<p>n=165. 3+5+11=19, 3<em>5</em>11=165</p>