The Manchester Grammar School 11 Plus Papers Arithmetic 2 2012Online Quiz view all papers Welcome to your THE MANCHESTER GRAMMAR SCHOOL 11 PLUS ARITHMETIC PAPER 2012 - 21 HourDo not open this booklet until told to do soCalculators may not be usedWrite your names, school and candidate number in the spaces provided at the top of the page.Show all your working in full, as this will be marked, and then writeyour answer clearly.1. All the measurements in the following diagram are given in centimetres(a) Find the perimeter of this letter F 42cm 22cm 32cm 52cm 40cm None 1.(b) Find the area of this letter F \[38 cm^{2}\] \[28 cm^{2}\] \[48 cm^{2}\] \[36 cm^{2}\] \[58 cm^{2}\] None 2. The FAB of a number is obtained by multiplying the number by all the wholenumbers less than or equal to it down to one.So FAB 3 = 6 because 3 x 2 x 1 = 6(a) Work out FAB 5 120 80 60 100 None of the Above None 2.(b) If FAB x = 720, what is the value of x ? 6 5 4 3 2 None 2.(c) What is FAB 11 divided by FAB 9? 110 120 100 140 None of the Above None (d) If FAB 10 = 3,628,800; what is FAB 9? 362880 382680 368280 368820 326880 None 3. Cheadle Construction uses metal beams, like the one below, in buildings to support walls and ceilings.The beams can be placed in one of two ways so the end of the beam is in either Position 1 or Position 2The height and width of a beam (in cms) determines the size of the greatest load (in kgs) the beam can support, according to the following formulaLoad = 10 x height x height x widthSo if the height is 4cm and the width is 6cm, the greatest load is given byL = 10 x 4 x 4 x 6 = 960kg(a) What is the greatest load a beam can support when itlies in position 1? 2000kg 960kg 1200kg 1800kg 1600kg None 3.(b) What is the difference in the loads between thetwo positions? 1200kg 1000kg 2000kg 1600kg None of the Above None 3.(c) The weight of a wall means that a beam in the wall is needed to support a load of 4860kg. If the width of the beam had to be 6cm, what height ofbeam would a builder have to use? 9cm 6cm 10cm 8cm 7cm None 4. The Code Club at Bletchley Park School were taking a break from theirnormal activities to devise some codes of their own. One of the apprenticecode makers came up with the following system for listing circles and circlesinside circles, using only brackets and the number l.(a) Give the codes for ||(|) |(|) | |(||) | | |(|) ||(|) |(|(|)) None 4. ||(|) |(|(|)) | |(||) | | |(|) ||(|) ||(|) |(|) None 5. A festival in Platt Fields attracted a huge crowd and all the people attendingbrought food with them to share out. Some people brought bread with them,others brought fish while the remainder brought fruit in the form of apples.Everyone agreed that they would share their food with each other according to thefollowing rulesTwo loaves of bread could be swapped for one fishand one loaf could be swapped for three apples(a) Oliver brought two fish and firstly swapped them forloaves of bread. Then he decided to change the loavesfor apples.How many apples did he get? 12 apples 3 apples 4 apples 8 apples 16 apples None 5.(b) How many loaves could Irfan have for three fishand twelve apples? 10 loaves 12 loaves 9 loaves 16 loaves None of the Above None 5.(c) Aidan wanted four fish to go with each loaf, how manyloaves and fish could he exchange for 54 apples? 2loaves & 8fish 4loaves & 6fish 3loaves & 9fish 2loaves & 4fish None of the Above None 6. You are given that 27 x 351 = 9477Use this information to answer the following questions(a) 9477 ÷ 351 27 37 17 47 None of the Above None (b) 2.7 x 3.51 9.477 9.157 9.457 9.588 9.327 None (c) 947.7 ÷ 270 3.51 2.21 4.51 5.61 None of the Above None (d) 54 x 351 18954 16954 16754 18754 17754 None 8. If the differences between each pair of consecutive terms of a sequence aretaken, and then the differences in this new sequence are taken, and so on,the numbers may turn out to be the same.For example for the sequence 1 4 9 16 25The first differences are 3 5 7 9And the second differences are 2 2 2As the second differences are the same, we say that the original sequence is a “sequence of order 2”(a) Fill in the gaps for this sequence of order 23 ———— ———— ———— ———— 1 ———— ———— ———— 5 5 5 4, 10, 21, 37 & 6, 11, 16 6, 12, 16, 25 & 8, 12, 18 6, 8, 16, 28 & 7, 12, 15 4, 12, 16, 18 & 5, 10, 12 None of the Above None 9. In the game of flog, a player has to try to get a ball in a hole in as few shots as possible. The target number of shots for each hole is 5 . The player is awarded a number of points according to how many shots he took:If David plays 3 holes and scores 3, 3 and 4, his total points score will be 5 because his points for each hole would be as follows 2 + 2 + 1 = 5But if John’s scores were 5, 7 and 6 on the same three holes, his total points score will be -3 because his points for each hole would be 0 + (-2) + (-1) = -3The winner is the player with the highest total number of points at the end of the game.(a) What would the total points score be if a player took thefollowing number of shots on successive holes:i) If Rodger took 6, 6, 6, 5 and 5 -3 -4 -6 3 4 None ii) If Nigel took 2, 5, 7, 4 and 7 0 1 -1 -3 2 None (b) Howard played four holes and scored 4, 1, 5, x. His totalpoints score was 3. What is the value of x, the number ofstrokes that Howard took on the fourth hole? 7 5 9 6 4 None (c) Rachel played six holes and scored 7, 2, 6, 6, 2, y. Her totalpoints score was 3. What is the value of y, the number ofstrokes that Rachel took on the sixth hole? 4 3 6 9 5 None (d) What is the maximum score that a player can get from playing:i) 5 holes? 20 25 16 10 12 None ii) 6 holes if he scores a 6 and two 7s on his first three holes? 7 6 9 5 8 None 10. The distance all the way round the outside of my bicycle wheel is known as thecircumference. It is about three times the distance across the middle of the wheel, known as the diameter.So if Andrew has a wheel with diameter 50 centimetres, its circumference would beabout 150cm or 1.5 metres and it would take 100 turns of the wheel to travel adistance of 150m and 1000 turns to travel 1.5 kilometres.Using this approximation that Circumference = 3 x diameter(a) How many metres would Andrew travel in 60 turnsof the wheel? 90m 75m 85m 95m 100m None (b) How many turns of the wheel would it take himto cover 600m? 400 200 500 300 600 None Andrew enters a road race, the distance for which is 75km(c) How many turns of his front wheel does this race take? 50000 75000 60000 40000 None of the Above None Andrew’s great-great-grandfather took part in the same race overa hundred years ago, but the large wheel on his penny-farthingbicycle was 2 metres across.(d) How many turns of this large wheel were requiredto complete the race? 12500 16500 15500 10500 None of the Above None (e) What fraction of Andrew’s number of turns was hisgreat-great-grandfathers number? \[\frac{1}{4}\] \[\frac{1}{2}\] \[\frac{3}{4}\] \[\frac{2}{3}\] None (f) Give a reason why this is. Ratio of turns Ratio of 50cm to 2m Number of turns Number of wheels Both a & b None 11. The Yummy Jam Company makes jam for a wide range of shops and supermarkets.The cost of a jar of jam is made up by adding the costs of the jam, the jar and the lid.SoTotal cost of a jar of jam = Cost of the jar + Cost of the lid + Cost of the jamAt present, the company calculates that the cost of the jam is 20p for every 100g(a) For a small jar, containing 200g of jam, the lid costs 10pand the jar 50p. What is the total cost of the jar of jam? 100p 60p 80p 110p None of the above None (b) A medium jar contains 350g of jam and the medium jarcosts 60p. If the total cost is £1.55, what is the cost ofthe lid for the medium jar of jam. 25p 50p 75p 160p 100p None (c) A large jar of jam contains 500g of jam and the total costis £3.00. If the jar costs four times as much as the lid,what does the jar cost? 160p 150p 120p 140p 170p None (d) A catering jar with a lid costing 65p and a jarcosting £2 has a total cost of £4.65. What weightof jam does the catering jar contain? 1000g 1500g 2000g 1600g None of the Above None 12.A point is described by its coordinates, eg point B on the diagram has coordinates (9,8).This is not the same as (8,9). Point A has coordinates (0,0).To move from one point to another on the graph you can travel by K-steps or by T-steps.A K-step moves you 1 place to the right and 2 places upA T-step moves you 3 places to the right and 1 place up.(a) Starting from point A, what would your coordinatesbe after a K-step followed by a T-step? (4, 3) (3, 3) (2, 3) (3, 4) (4, 6) None (b) It is possible to move from point A to point Bby combining some K-steps and some T-steps.Write down how many K-steps and T-steps areneeded. 3 k-steps, 2 T-steps 6 k-steps, 4 T-steps 2 k-steps, 3 T-steps 4 k-steps, 3 T-steps None (c) To get from point C (which is not shown on thediagram) to point B you need to take one K-stepand two T-steps. Write down the coordinates of thepoint C. (2, 4) (3, 2) (1, 3) (1, 4) (4, 3) None A U -step is the reverse of a T-step. So a U-step movesyou 3 places left and 1 place down.(d) Starting from point B, and then doing a U-step, a K-stepand a T-step, you finish up at a point D (not shown).Write down the coordinates of point D. (10, 10) (12, 10) (8, 16) (12, 14) (15, 13) None Time's up