Have a guess ....

5.5pt = ~3.12L = 3120 cubic cm

Pound coin is ~1.25 cubic cm.

Therefore 3120 / 1.25 = £2496 if they filled all available space.

Due to the wasted space of them being circular and piled inefficiently i'm going to knock 40% off that figure and go with:

£1498
 
The actual amount of coins in the jug was £1380


The winner is ...... the darjeeling with 1377 :D

Here's an abstract character with your prize :D

1581k5d.jpg
 
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So how many fruit machines, charity buckets and parking meters did you have to rob to collect that then :D
 
I wonder what the average of all the guesses is?

(I am not about to work it out just for now)

Wisdom of Crowds

TL;DR version

The classic wisdom-of-the-crowds finding involves point estimation of a continuous quantity. At a 1906 country fair in Plymouth, eight hundred people participated in a contest to estimate the weight of a slaughtered and dressed ox. Statistician Francis Galton observed that the median guess, 1207 pounds, was accurate within 1% of the true weight of 1198 pounds.[3] This has contributed to the insight in cognitive science that a crowd's individual judgements can be modelled as a probability distribution of responses with the mean centred near the true mean of the quantity to be estimated.
 
I wonder what the average of all the guesses is?

(I am not about to work it out just for now)

Wisdom of Crowds

TL;DR version

The classic wisdom-of-the-crowds finding involves point estimation of a continuous quantity. At a 1906 country fair in Plymouth, eight hundred people participated in a contest to estimate the weight of a slaughtered and dressed ox. Statistician Francis Galton observed that the median guess, 1207 pounds, was accurate within 1% of the true weight of 1198 pounds.[3] This has contributed to the insight in cognitive science that a crowd's individual judgements can be modelled as a probability distribution of responses with the mean centred near the true mean of the quantity to be estimated.

That's great but the eleventybillion and tree fiddy might throw it off slightly :D
 
That's great but the eleventybillion and tree fiddy might throw it off slightly :D

True, I would (In this case) exclude the "Obvious" silly ones. However the weird thing is that with a sufficiently large sample of people the phenomena still works even if you include the stoopid guesses.

While I can sort of see why it works, it is still nevertheless fascinating that it does (And really well too!)

Remember it is median rather than mean as such
 
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