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This was a tricky problem but we received some detailed solutions - well done.
Frank, Noah and Ben from Stanford Junior School said:
If the number of teeth on one cog is the multiple of teeth on the other cog it will not work. So if the teeth on one cog is 5 and on the other cog is ten teeth it will not work.Sean, Ben, Lane and Jonathan from Meridian Primary School told us about some of the things they noticed:
First of all, all consecutive numbers will work because the smaller will go round once but won't make it to the start point by one so eventually it will make it the whole way round (e.g. $4$, $5$).Pranjal from Garden International School, Kuala Lumpur took these ideas a bit further and wrote:
There are three different ways of determining which pairs of cogs work and which don't:Jong Woong, Jayme, Denise and Mariana, also from Garden International School, have reasoned through this problem very carefully. They told us how they worked to solve the problem. First, they said they wrote down all the pairs possible using the $4$, $5$, $6$, $7$, $8$, $10$, $11$ and $12$ cogs:
($4$, $5$) ($4$, $6$) ($4$, $7$) ($4$, $8$) ($4$, $10$) ($4$, $11$) ($4$, $12$)Then they tried random cogs to see if they worked and tried to find a pattern among them.
Pairs that workThey asked themselves questions:
Why does this happen?They then wrote:
We found out that that the pairs that have a HCF (highest common factor) of $1$ work.Well done to all of you who sent a solution to this problem. I wonder whether anyone else can find a way to explain why cogs will only work if they have a HCF of $1$?
We can arrange dots in a similar way to the 5 on a dice and they usually sit quite well into a rectangular shape. How many altogether in this 3 by 5? What happens for other sizes?
What happens if you join every second point on this circle? How about every third point? Try with different steps and see if you can predict what will happen.
Let's say you can only use two different lengths - 2 units and 4 units. Using just these 2 lengths as the edges how many different cuboids can you make?