Question #83656

2 Answers
Feb 16, 2018

A cassette costs $ 7 and a CD costs $ 15.

Explanation:

Let's assume that the cost of a cassette is c and the cost of a CD is d

We can thus form 2 equations:

Equation 1: 5c + 2d = 65

Equation 2: 3c + 4d = 81

If we change equation 2 to make d the subject of the formula, we get:

d = (81 - 3c)/4

Substituting this equation into the first one, we get:

5c + 2((81-3c)/4) = 65)

Which is 5c + (81 - 3c)2 = 65

Multiplying the whole equation by 2 gives

10c + 81 - 3c = 130

Solving for c will give us
7c = 130 - 81
So c = 49/7 = 7

Substituting c in equation 1:

d = (81 - 3(7))/4 = (81 - 21)/4 = 15

So the cost of a cassette is $ 7 and that of a CD is $ 15.

Feb 16, 2018

Cassettes are $7 and CDs are $15.

Explanation:

Set up a system of equations, with x as cassettes and y as cds.
5x+2y = 65 rarr equation 1
3x+4y = 81 rarr equation 2

Now, use either substitution or elimination to solve. I show substitution below, but you get the same answer either way.
equation 1
5x+2y=65 rarr subtract 5x from both sides
2y=65-5x rarr plug into equation 2
equation 2
3x+2(65-5x) = 81 rarr distribute
3x+130-10x = 81 rarr get x terms on one side, anything else on the other
-7x=-49 rarr divide by -7
x=7 rarr plug back into equation 1
equation 1
5(7)+2y=65rarrdistribute
35+2y=65rarrsubtract 35 from both sides
2y=30rarrdivide by 2
y=15rarr use to check answers

CHECK
5(7)+2(15) = 65
35+30=65
65=65

3(7)+4(15) =81
21+60 = 81
81=81