inequality for 'You are trying to decide which to buy...'

ccarter

New member
Joined
Jan 22, 2008
Messages
1
Create an inequality to represent the following situation:
You are trying to decide whether to pay $120 for a season pass to an amusement park. If you buy the pass, you get an unlimited number of visits to the park and reduced parking for $7. If you do not buy the pass, you pay $32 for admission and $10 for parking each time you visit the park. After how many visits will the cost of the season pass be less than the cost of visiting without a pass?
 
ccarter said:
Create an inequality to represent the following situation:
You are trying to decide whether to pay $120 for a season pass to an amusement park. If you buy the pass, you get an unlimited number of visits to the park and reduced parking for $7. If you do not buy the pass, you pay $32 for admission and $10 for parking each time you visit the park. After how many visits will the cost of the season pass be less than the cost of visiting without a pass?
What have you tried? How far have you gotten? Where are you stuck?

Please be complete. Thank you! :D

Eliz.
 
ccarter said:
Create an inequality to represent the following situation:
You are trying to decide whether to pay $120 for a season pass to an amusement park. If you buy the pass, you get an unlimited number of visits to the park and reduced parking for $7. If you do not buy the pass, you pay $32 for admission and $10 for parking each time you visit the park. After how many visits will the cost of the season pass be less than the cost of visiting without a pass?

Duplicate post (answered)

http://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework ... 21926.html
 
Top