Caporegime
- Joined
- 17 Oct 2006
- Posts
- 25,707
Three minutes to complete.
Answer and reasoning.
GO..
Answer and reasoning.
GO..

seems striaght forward enough
firstly the number is less than 100
secondly it is one greater than a multiple of 5 so from that we can deduce it ends in a 1 or a 6
it is also one less than a common multiple of both 6 and 8... so we're looking for a multiple of 6 and 8 ending in a 2 (we can't have one ending in a 7!)
there is only one common multiple of both 6 and 8 that ends in a 2 and is less than 100
our number is that multiple - 1
also it is a prime number so our OCD book packer isn't going to find a way to pack his books in equal numbers - Katie needs to tell Jack to get a grip

are you sure![]()
Did it like Dowie but didnt spot the 2/7 business as it was fairly obvious once you know its one above a number that has the factors 6 and 8
ps3ud0![]()
Sorry thats not what I meant, I just didnt bother to methodise beyond it being a one below a multiple of 6 and 8 and knowing it was near 100 I just hit the answer at the first try and let someone else waste time replying with a proper methodeh? But there are 4 multiples of 6 and 8 that are less than 100 what made you pick the answer you did pick and disregard the other three if you didn't spot that it would have to end in a 2?


yup, what else do you think it could be?

I went through my 6 and 8 multiples till I found the first number that they had in common, 72 and 5 goes in to 70 and that fits the question so 71. Took maybe 45 seconds doing in that way in my head.
defo didn't brute force it but i've got the following:
11, 23, 31, 41, 47, 71 all satisfy the criteria, given the girl's original estimate of 100 books it'd make sense to go for the largest number and go with 71, although as dave pointed out i'm an engineer, i don't do riddles