The mileage in thousands of miles that car owners get with a
The mileage (in thousands of miles) that car owners get with a certain kind of radial tire is normally distributed with a mean of 45,000 and a standard deviation of 3,000 miles, respectively.
To 4 decimal places what is the probability that a tire will last for more than 50,000 miles?
To 4 decimal places what is the probability that a tire will last for no more than 35,000 miles?
To the nearest mile, 90% of the tires will last for how many miles?
Solution
a)
We first get the z score for the critical value. As z = (x - u) / s, then as
x = critical value = 50000
u = mean = 45000
s = standard deviation = 3000
Thus,
z = (x - u) / s = 1.666666667
Thus, using a table/technology, the right tailed area of this is
P(z > 1.666666667 ) = 0.047790352 [ANSWER]
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b)
We first get the z score for the critical value. As z = (x - u) / s, then as
x = critical value = 35000
u = mean = 45000
s = standard deviation = 3000
Thus,
z = (x - u) / s = -3.333333333
Thus, using a table/technology, the left tailed area of this is
P(z < -3.333333333 ) = 0.00042906 [ANSWER]
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c)
First, we get the z score from the given left tailed area. As
Left tailed area = 0.9
Then, using table or technology,
z = 1.281551566
As x = u + z * s,
where
u = mean = 45000
z = the critical z score = 1.281551566
s = standard deviation = 3000
Then
x = critical value = 48844.6547 [ANSWER]

