A Takes 3 Hours More Than B to Walk 30 km, But If A Doubles His Pace, He is Ahead of B by 2 Hours. Find Their Speed of Walking.

Let’s denote the speed of A as vA km/h and the speed of B as vB km/h.

From the problem, we know that A takes 3 hours more than B to walk 30 km. Therefore, we can set up the following equations based on the formula: time = distance/speed.

For A:

  • Time taken by A = 30/vA hours

For B:

  • Time taken by B = 30/vB hours

According to the given information:

Time taken by A = Time taken by B + 3 hours

This leads to the equation:

30/vA = 30/vB + 3

Rearranging gives us:

30/vA - 30/vB = 3

Next, we learn that if A doubles his speed, he finishes 2 hours before B:

  • Time taken by A at double speed = 30/(2vA) hours
  • Time taken by B remains the same = 30/vB hours

The relationship then states:

Time taken by A (at double speed) = Time taken by B – 2 hours

30/(2vA) = 30/vB - 2

Now, we have two equations:
Depending on what you require, we can solve these equations to find the desired speeds. Let’s solve them step-by-step.

1) From the first equation, we can express one speed in terms of the other:

30/vA - 30/vB = 3 
=> 10(vB - vA) = vA vB 

2) From second equation:

30/(2vA) + 2 = 30/vB 

Simplifying yields

15/vA + 2 = 30/vB

We can express vB in terms of vA:

1/vB= (1/15+2)/vA

Based on these equations, we can substitute values and solve simultaneously. Upon doing so, we find:

  • vA = 3 km/h
  • vB = 5 km/h

Thus, the required speeds of walking are A’s speed is 3 km/h and B’s speed is 5 km/h.

More Related Questions