Interview Riddle - 16 Bikes || Logic and Optimization Puzzle

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2021
  • Interview puzzle :
    There are 16 motorbikes with a tank that has the capacity to go 100 km (when the tank is full).
    Using these 16 motorbikes, what is the maximum distance that you can go?
    -All the motorbikes are initially fully fuelled.
    -They all start from the same point.
    -and Each bike has a rider on it.
    Pls Note: We just have to find out the maximum distance that we can go, We don't want all the bikes to reach at that final point.
    It's not a hard riddle, however, it requires a brain twisting trick to solve this problem correctly.
    So, Pause the video and think logically.
    It's an amazing Google interview riddle to challenge your intelligence.
    So if you are looking for a job at Google, please study optimization based puzzles in detail.
    You can share puzzles and riddles with me on these links:
    Gmail : logicreloaded@gmail.com
    Facebook(message) : / mohammmedammar
    Also try these brilliant mind blowing puzzles:
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Комментарии • 597

  • @piyushborse
    @piyushborse 3 года назад +89

    Is it only me who thought attaching bikes with the ropes, a perfect indian solution

    • @literallylegendary6594
      @literallylegendary6594 3 года назад

      There are no ropes in the problem.

    • @piyushborse
      @piyushborse 3 года назад +39

      @@literallylegendary6594 😂there are no pipes and funnels too in the problem to transfer fuel.

    • @TheJschulter
      @TheJschulter 3 года назад +5

      Exactly! And even assuming each bike can only tow one other, you still get 500km!

    • @yodan00b
      @yodan00b 3 года назад +8

      @@literallylegendary6594 there may not have been rope, but each bike has it's own rider.. just make it their responsibility to hold on to the bike in front of them ;)

    • @pablomartinsantamaria8689
      @pablomartinsantamaria8689 3 года назад

      Me too

  • @pintokitkat
    @pintokitkat 3 года назад +47

    The maximum distance that can be covered is 1600 km. The riddle does not say 'what is the furthest you can get from the start'. It says 'what's the maximum distance? '

    • @OscarLT321
      @OscarLT321 3 года назад +2

      *alll bikes start from the same point, is part of the conditions

    • @pintokitkat
      @pintokitkat 3 года назад +14

      @@OscarLT321 on a 100km circular track a bike will run out of fuel back at the start, at which point I get off my empty bike and get on a full one and continue. After I've used all the bikes I have traveled 1600 km and not broken any of the conditions.

    • @OscarLT321
      @OscarLT321 3 года назад

      @@pintokitkat With that logic you could also say it's way beyond 1600 km if you can refuel after each lap. There are millions of loopholes to get out of solving an equation

    • @company5685
      @company5685 3 года назад +7

      @@OscarLT321 what he says is perfectly logical and you come around the corner and compare it to refueling? where does this come from xD

    • @SusEGP
      @SusEGP 3 года назад +1

      Yeah not displacement

  • @namdoolb
    @namdoolb 3 года назад +29

    Mathematically optimal, but possibly not practically so:
    You gain just over 12% distance over the unoptimised solution, but have to stop 4× as many times, and the siphoning operation at each stop is much more complex because instead of each donor bike donating to one other bike it's donating to x other bikes.
    You'll gain a little ground, but at a considerable cost in time.
    Now, I realise the bike scenario is an abstract & that you are demonstrating a mathematical concept.
    But this does also demonstrate that the best solution is sometimes the one that is "good enough".

    • @AdelaeR
      @AdelaeR 3 года назад +1

      You wouldn't call your solution "good enough" when stranded in the desert and your only hope is to reach help.

    • @namdoolb
      @namdoolb 3 года назад +1

      I think you miss the point of my comment

    • @ejrupp9555
      @ejrupp9555 3 года назад +2

      Didn't see the question as practical, it just asked for a maximum. The practicality of it increases with the distance a bike could cover. If a bike could cover only 1 foot with a tank, then it's more practical to just walk. So practicality is something of an opinion. 38km for the cost of the change in time it takes to distribute the fuel in the tanks. How long does it take to push a bike that far? Longer than that change in time cost, I imagine.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace Год назад

      Practical engineering never approaches theoretical efficiencies.

  • @JoaoManuelCanelas
    @JoaoManuelCanelas 3 года назад +11

    start 1 bike, ride it for half tank in one direction, reverse until you're back at the starting point. Repeat process to any bike that you haven't rode yet until there's none left.
    Distance travelled: 1 600 km

  • @deepmayekar140
    @deepmayekar140 3 года назад +128

    My brain just assumed a circular track and calculated 1600 km distance 😅

    • @johnstygall860
      @johnstygall860 3 года назад +2

      My thinking exactly..much simpler solution

    • @happygoyal594
      @happygoyal594 3 года назад +4

      Then starting point and ending point will be same so the distance will be 0 🙄

    • @hrishiharshsengar9499
      @hrishiharshsengar9499 3 года назад +9

      @@happygoyal594 displacement*

    • @harishmr5426
      @harishmr5426 3 года назад +11

      Assuming one bike is used for 100 km to pull the remaining bikes…
      We can cover 1600 km ig😂

    • @happygoyal594
      @happygoyal594 3 года назад

      @@harishmr5426 🔥🔥🔥🔥😂😂

  • @Jeffsd17
    @Jeffsd17 3 года назад +72

    Interesting problem, clever solution. I figured out the concept, but had Excel do the math. Unfortunately, you miscalculated one number - Milestone #9 is 12.5 km, and the correct answer is 338.07 km

    • @grantschade2072
      @grantschade2072 3 года назад +6

      @Ethan Goldberger just shows how many people lie about stupid shit like this

    • @joshriver7749
      @joshriver7749 3 года назад

      I was wondering why my phone calculator wasn't giving the same result, thanks a lot.

    • @mrgyani
      @mrgyani 3 года назад +3

      I used excel too. Arrived at the same answer as you - 338.0728993 kms

    • @dividebyzero1000
      @dividebyzero1000 3 года назад +1

      @@mrgyani LOL, it is only us excel users that caught this...

    • @Ni999
      @Ni999 3 года назад +5

      @@dividebyzero1000 Approach is obvious and so is the formula.
      ([1 to 16]∑ (1/n)) × 100
      Wolfram Alpha user here, caught it immediately with less work than Excel.
      PS - H[16]*100 if you can remember to use the function for that. I never do lol.

  • @stevendoyel
    @stevendoyel 3 года назад +30

    Basically: eliminate as many bikes driving as soon as you can (this eliminates the number of bikes consuming fuel)

    • @cvindustries
      @cvindustries 3 года назад +1

      This riddle doubles as a great explanation of asparagus staging in rocketry

  • @IanDangerfield
    @IanDangerfield 3 года назад +29

    You guys! I was able to solve this with the optimal solution and code it in python before seeing his solution. It's significant to me because it's the first time I've solved something from scratch. As already mentioned the end total distance traveled is actually 338.07km. Thank you for the challenge!

    • @abhisarbankar
      @abhisarbankar 3 года назад

      Great

    • @bluemoon6611
      @bluemoon6611 3 года назад

      If possible can u share the code?

    • @ClearAlera
      @ClearAlera 3 года назад +2

      I did the same thing in C++ and got 338.073 as well. Here's the code:
      int main()
      {
      float TotalMiles = 0;
      float NumberOfBikes = 16;
      while(NumberOfBikes > 0)
      {
      TotalMiles = TotalMiles + (100/NumberOfBikes);
      NumberOfBikes--;
      }
      std::cout

    • @aksh9517
      @aksh9517 3 года назад +3

      There is an error in video where 100/8 = 12.25 is shown, which should be 12.5 hence your answer is most accurate

    • @bluemoon6611
      @bluemoon6611 3 года назад

      @@ClearAlera thank you

  • @jdmbone003
    @jdmbone003 3 года назад +15

    Take the tanks off of the 15 other bikes and swap them out every 100km for a total of 1600km

    • @montythebugman6308
      @montythebugman6308 Год назад

      Are you could try using math. I'm guessing it took you a looooong time for you to learn how to color within the lines, am I right?

  • @sergeyg2926
    @sergeyg2926 3 года назад +34

    For 8 bikes, the value should be 12.5, not 12.25, I believe.

    • @DayTheWeek
      @DayTheWeek 3 года назад +8

      I ended up with a combined distance of 338.0729 kilometers.

  • @lab483
    @lab483 3 года назад +16

    Hooray one I got strait away, I'm usually slapping my head for not getting it. Thanks for the ego boost and keep the great puzzles coming.

  • @Anoxonamoon
    @Anoxonamoon 3 года назад +11

    the correct answer is 338.07 km (and that's what i got) and not 337.818 and that's because you miscalculated 100/8=12.5 and not 12.25 as you showed at 5:15
    thank you

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад +2

      Thanks for bringing this to my notice... you are absolutely correct bro.

    • @OrenLikes
      @OrenLikes 3 года назад

      partial harmonic series, H16*100km = ~338.073km!

  • @DJSaez-ll8or
    @DJSaez-ll8or Год назад +4

    Although the problem could have been worded better, the solution was very interesting! Thank you!

  • @Ihaveseenthewhey
    @Ihaveseenthewhey 3 года назад +15

    The phrasing of the question is wrong. As it is, I can transfer all the fuel to an external container carry it on one bike, refuel as necessary and go 1600km…

    • @vispafm
      @vispafm 3 года назад +1

      No container, they had to take a rope and go together. It would be real- good for phrasing - and close to 1600 km, now it's a question about friction force. My guess it's 1598 )

    • @bwillan
      @bwillan 3 года назад +1

      That was also presume that the additional weight of the extra fuel didn't affect the fuel economy of the motorbike to begin with.

    • @saisreethamtheegela2081
      @saisreethamtheegela2081 3 года назад +1

      Found someone who had a similar idea😅

  • @anielloizzo1742
    @anielloizzo1742 3 года назад +3

    I would (before listening to the solution) say 338.0729km. It is given by the sum from 16 to 1 of 100/n where n is the number of bikes riding simultaneously.
    The basic idea behind the formula is that the bike start all togheter and then, after 100/n km 1 of the bikes stops and share its fuel to the others bikes until 1 only bike remains.

    • @OrenLikes
      @OrenLikes 3 года назад +1

      You are more accurate!
      partial harmonic series, H16*100km = ~338.073km.

    • @adamae.7246
      @adamae.7246 3 года назад

      Yes, I got the same result! I don't know why the answer in the video is not accurate.

  • @pemalai1895
    @pemalai1895 11 месяцев назад +1

    Strap all of the bikes to one in pairs(like a cart) for balance and have a trio among them if the total number of bikes is even until the last 2. Strap this to the one you’re riding. Then, strap the second last one to the side of the first one(or the back if you’re skilled). Use motorbike parts if needed as the straps. This approach gets 1600 km.

  • @anandgurumurthy6034
    @anandgurumurthy6034 3 года назад +55

    What if I rode 50 km and came back to same point 16 times. I would have covered a distance of 1600 kms without going anywhere though but I would have covered the distance.

    • @kamild685
      @kamild685 3 года назад

      The task is how far can u go not the maximum distance you can cover.

    • @Ni999
      @Ni999 3 года назад +9

      @@kamild685 The thumbnail literally says, "What is the maximum distance you can go?" The maximum distance you can go is 1600, the furthest you can go is ~338.073, so I'd accept both answers if it was up to me.

    • @rohitjathot4031
      @rohitjathot4031 3 года назад

      Agree with Anand. We need to find max distance not displacement.

    • @marvinkitfox3386
      @marvinkitfox3386 3 года назад +5

      That is a valid solution for the INCREDIBLY BADLY WORDED puzzle.

    • @marvinkitfox3386
      @marvinkitfox3386 3 года назад +1

      @@kamild685 "The task is how far can u go not the maximum distance you can cover." BULLSHIT!
      That is *****************EXACTLY***************** what the question asks for.
      Look at 0:37 QUOTE "what is the maximum distance you can go"
      The question is asked in such fuzzy language, that the interpretation is up to the reader.

  • @ExaltedwithFail
    @ExaltedwithFail 3 года назад +7

    KSP and asparagus staging taught me this. Gotta love interchangable knowlege

  • @maxjahns9063
    @maxjahns9063 3 года назад +6

    You have to put the possibility of transfering fuel in the presumtions... otherwise the answer is 100km.

    • @craftycraftybird6932
      @craftycraftybird6932 3 года назад

      It did infer that when it said not all the bikes had to reach the maximum point

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 3 года назад

      @@craftycraftybird6932 no, he is right, it's also not stated that you've got a siphoning hose or other equipment.

    • @stephanreiken9912
      @stephanreiken9912 3 года назад

      Dump half the drivers from the get go and have the other half tow bikes. Lose some fuel efficiency, probably around 10% based on google, but now the distance of one bike is 180 not 100.
      If you can infer being able to transfer fuel, surely having the towing equipment isn't out of the question either.

  • @GSS_94
    @GSS_94 3 года назад +7

    This guy: *let's use optimization*
    My Indian brain: *use one leg to push the other bike*
    1st 100 km 8 bikes rem
    2nd 100 4bikes remaining
    3rd 100 2 bikes rem
    4th 100 1 bike remaining
    5th 100 run out of fuel.
    500 km travelled.
    This is called DJ or Desi Jugaad 🤣

    • @ashwaniagrawal3570
      @ashwaniagrawal3570 2 года назад +2

      Interviewer after listening to this approach : salary kitna loge??

    • @GSS_94
      @GSS_94 2 года назад

      @@ashwaniagrawal3570 😂

  • @WgdVids
    @WgdVids 3 года назад +6

    If anyone has played Kerbal Space Program and done asparagus staging, this is essentially the same principal. The exceptions being that the fuel transfer is constant as distance is covered, and that you have to drop 2 vehicles at a time rather than one to keep your mass centered.

    • @illiacvie
      @illiacvie 3 года назад

      exactly what in my mind

    • @Stewpacc
      @Stewpacc 3 года назад +1

      What a strange place to find a RuneScape legend

  • @alexortiz9777
    @alexortiz9777 3 года назад +8

    I definitely fell into the first optimization trap when I was first figuring it out. Misleading power of two!

  • @sorsocksfake
    @sorsocksfake Год назад +1

    Every mile a motorcycle needs to drive, is fuel used out of the 1600 total fuel(km). So we want to drive bikes as little as possible. This is done by dropping out a bike as soon as its remaining fuel is just enough to top everyone else off.
    At the start, that's after 100/16=6.25km. The remaining 15/16th of his fuel is divided among the other 15 bikes, which ride on. After 100/15 = 6.666 km the second bike divides its remaining 14/15th of fuel among the oter 14, and so forth.
    This gets 100/16+100/15+ ... +100/2+100/1= just over 338 km.

  • @Aditya.7_7
    @Aditya.7_7 3 года назад +1

    Really one of the most useful channels to learn how to use different approaches to solutions .
    Just wished 3 puzzles could be uploaded per month .

  • @TomTravelling
    @TomTravelling 3 года назад +11

    Logically the maximum total distance you can cover is 1600 km - the simplest way is for them all to start out together, perhaps on different roads.

    • @TomTravelling
      @TomTravelling 3 года назад +2

      Or if on 1 bike, the bike circles back to the starting point when empty to refuel.
      Of course, you can go thru your calcs if you want to find the location furthest from the starting point a rider can get to. But that was not the problem statement.

    • @richardklepper3299
      @richardklepper3299 3 года назад +3

      @@TomTravelling just strap all the other 15 bikes onto one, and switch to another bike every 100km

    • @gorg212
      @gorg212 3 года назад +1

      @@richardklepper3299 but then one bike has to carry all the other 15 bikes so it will take lot of power on them too, but not considering that then its correct

    • @richardklepper3299
      @richardklepper3299 3 года назад +3

      @@gorg212 well, varying weight of the riders, wind drag, road conditions etc were all ignored as well. but it's a great thought challenge.

    • @alquinn8576
      @alquinn8576 3 года назад

      @@TomTravelling the problem statement was not well stated tbh...i didn't understand who the "you" was in the set-up

  • @brpawankumariyengar4227
    @brpawankumariyengar4227 3 года назад +3

    Awesome video …. I made the similar mistake and got 300 KM …. Thank you very much for the better approach to the solution.

  • @wango6603
    @wango6603 3 года назад +6

    The explanation is really good. Keep up the quality content

  • @emem2756
    @emem2756 3 года назад +12

    That's cool solution to optimize but only in one dimension. Just imagine time needed to transfer the fuel every few km...

  • @himanshusaini6014
    @himanshusaini6014 3 года назад +25

    What's up logical people this is Ammar😀😂
    I always recite this line when I opened the VDO 😅
    Now it's my habit 🤣

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад +6

      😄😄thanks bro :)

    • @himanshusaini6014
      @himanshusaini6014 3 года назад +3

      I'm eagerly waiting for Ur reply too good content didn't find anywhere keep working 🙏🏻❤️❤️

    • @aniketnikam4977
      @aniketnikam4977 3 года назад

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS I got better answer
      Follow the same logic but half of the bike goes to opposite side to other half bike then we get maximum distance 543.58 km

    • @darklightwhatever6970
      @darklightwhatever6970 3 года назад +1

      @@aniketnikam4977 wouldnt work...asked maximum distance you can go..not the others...answer is 1600km...nowhere did it say max distance from starting point.

    • @d.SAiNi.
      @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +1

      @@darklightwhatever6970
      But you always can tow. 😁😋😋

  • @CultOfJ
    @CultOfJ 3 года назад +3

    Always love your content❤️

  • @zecrets
    @zecrets 3 года назад +3

    Always fun to crack down your puzzles brother ! Although I manage a correct approach, but incorrect answer 😁

  • @HenryCabotHenhouse3
    @HenryCabotHenhouse3 8 месяцев назад +2

    And here I thought the optimal solution yielded 1600 km traveled. The first fifteen bikes hold on to each other and the sixteenth tows them 100 km. He drops off and the second bike tows the next 100 km. Repeat for all 16 bikes and you (the sixteenth) have gone 1600 km. Well, probably closer to 1550 because of extra fuel usage for towing, but you get the point. Anyway, that is the actual optimum solution - don't run motors when you don't have to. "The best part is no part" - Elon Musk.

  • @ikhlaqmuneer7901
    @ikhlaqmuneer7901 3 года назад +1

    U never fail to amaze us with ur puzzles.

  • @supratikb1998
    @supratikb1998 3 года назад +33

    Most underrated channel in you tube

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад +9

      I just give my best for you guys :)

    • @achalbhoir1359
      @achalbhoir1359 3 года назад

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS Please correct me if I'm wrong
      16 bikes 100 kms
      After 10 km (0+10 km=10 km traveled)
      16 bikes have 90 kms remaining
      remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 15
      90/15= 6 km and 90+6=96
      15 bikes remaining with 96 km each
      after 12 km (10+12=22km traveled)
      All 15 bikes have 84 km remaining
      Remove 1 bike & refuel remaining 14
      84/14= 6 km and 84+6=90
      14 bikes remaining with 90 km each
      Again after 12 km (22+12=34 km)
      All 14 bikes have 78 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel others
      = 78+6 = 84 km remain in 13 bikes
      Again after 12 km (34+12=46)
      13 bikes have 72 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 12
      72+6=78 in 12 bikes
      After 1 km (46+1=47)
      12 bikes have 77 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel 11
      77+7=84
      11 bikes with 84 km each
      After 4 km 47+4= 51
      11 bikes with 80 km left
      Remove 1 refuel 10
      = 88 km 10 bikes
      After 7 km (51+7= 58)
      10 bikes with 81 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel 9 with
      9 ltr = 81+9=90 km
      9 bikes 90 ltr
      After 2 km (58+2=60)
      9 bikes with 88 km left
      Remove 1 bike & refuel remaining 8
      With 11 ltr = 88+11=99
      8 bikes 99 ltr
      After 15 km (60+15=75)
      8 bikes with 84 km left
      Remove 1 & refuel other 7
      = 84+12= 96 km
      7 bikes 96 km left
      After 12 km (75+12=87 km)
      7 bikes with 84 km left
      Remove 1 & refuel remaining 6
      =84+14= 98 km
      6 bikes with 98 km left
      After 18 km (87+18=105 km)
      6 bikes with 80 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 5
      = 80+16= 96 km
      5 bikes with 96 km left
      After 16 km (105+16=121 km)
      5 bikes with 80 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 4
      = 80+20= 100
      4 bikes with 100 km left
      After 25 km (121+25= 146 km)
      4 bikes with 75 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 3
      75 +25= 100 km left
      3 bikes with 100 km left
      After 50 km (146+50= 196 km)
      3 bikes with 50 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 2
      = 50+50= 100 km left
      2 bikes with 100 km left
      After 50 km (196+50= 246 km)
      2 bikes with 50 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining 1 50+50= 100
      1 bike with 100 km left
      After 100 km (246+100= 346 km)
      1 bike with 0 km left
      Total 346 possible

    • @samarthgiri7158
      @samarthgiri7158 3 года назад +1

      @@achalbhoir1359 You got a little mistake in there. When 3 bikes with 50 km are left then a single bike with 50 km cannot completely fill the tanks of two bikes. It will go like this :
      When you're left with 3 bikes with 100 km,Total Distance:146 km
      After 33.3 km (146+33.3=179.3)
      3 bikes with 66.6 km left
      Remove 1 bike and refuel remaining two
      = 66.6+33.3= 100 km left
      2 bikes with 100 km left
      And you will finally get the answer : 329.3 km
      NIce try though.

    • @achalbhoir1359
      @achalbhoir1359 3 года назад +1

      @@samarthgiri7158 thanks bro🔥🙏😀

  • @sillypuppy5940
    @sillypuppy5940 3 года назад +6

    The riddle does not preclude leaving the bike behind and walking, which means one could cover significantly more ground.

  • @realtamal
    @realtamal 3 года назад +5

    Just add each bike with another with rope, while using one, keep other bikes neutral, BOOM friends you can go 1600 KM and no one will be left behind, true friendship will be created..... Trust me😁

    • @d.SAiNi.
      @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +2

      Definitely (by ignoring other factors). 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @tinobemotorsport5143
      @tinobemotorsport5143 3 года назад +2

      Had it the same way!!

    • @azizimohdnoor3604
      @azizimohdnoor3604 3 года назад +2

      No, the burden to pull all bikes (15 bikes for the most front bike) will consume more fuel. It won't reach 1600 km but still greater than 300 km for sure

    • @d.SAiNi.
      @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +2

      @@azizimohdnoor3604
      Yes, but If we are ignoring factors like losing some fuel by vaporization and spilling while transferring to other bikes and burning more fuel by stopping/starting on small intervals etc...
      Then we also can ignore some factors like balancing, burning more fuel by towing 15 bikes on neutral, etc.. and go for 1600kms. 😁😋😋

  • @creativetweakers3089
    @creativetweakers3089 3 года назад +2

    Thank you 😊

  • @krishnamoorthynatarajan6903
    @krishnamoorthynatarajan6903 3 года назад +4

    nearly got there. 100 / 16 .. but I thought the stop will be always 6.25.. but it should be 100 / 15 , 100 / 14 so on.. good one !

  • @ankanathharsha5017
    @ankanathharsha5017 3 года назад

    MINDBLOWN!
    EXCEPTIONAL!
    PROBLEM SOLVING @ THE PRIME TIME HERE IN THIS CHANEL
    KEEP GOIN!!>>>>

  • @RishabhSharma10225
    @RishabhSharma10225 3 года назад

    That was a great video. I really liked it! Keep up the hard work and you'll be the biggest channel of your type on RUclips

  • @arrowrod
    @arrowrod 8 месяцев назад +1

    1600 KM. The question was distance traveled, not how far. But, if you use Euler's number, logarithms, divide by infinity, add 3 in the 27th step of your equation. 10KM. Unless you want 11.

  • @pobi007
    @pobi007 3 года назад +4

    Another solution, 1600 km. One bike will move towards any direction and will return to same starting point, so travel by 1 vehicle is 100 km and can repeat 16 times. So, total distance travelled 1600 km. Just thinking out of box as this is a riddle. 😁🙏🙏

    • @fastestslowest1864
      @fastestslowest1864 2 года назад +1

      There is a difference between distance and displacement. Your displacement is 0,so max distance covered 0km.

  • @stephanreiken9912
    @stephanreiken9912 3 года назад

    I haven't figured out that milestone part. It ignores the inefficiencies from step one. First, dump half of the drivers and have the other half of the motorbikes tow the empty ones. There is a mild loss of fuel efficacy from extra weight but you did dump the other riders so as to minimize the loss.

  • @devanshzaveri2852
    @devanshzaveri2852 3 года назад +3

    U r besttt❣️❣️

  • @only_comments
    @only_comments 2 года назад +1

    Actually it can be 1600 km as you have asked maximum distance.. if it is maximum displacement, then it is 337 as you mentioned.😉
    As many people in the comment section are finding out loopholes and giving different solutions, I tried myself too😉

  • @gmchess7367
    @gmchess7367 3 года назад +1

    I like this problem too much 🤩🤩👍

  • @n-steam
    @n-steam 3 года назад

    As a mathematical problem, this solution does work. In practicality, time is another resource that you would need to consider. Imagine a similar scenario but with boats travelling upstream.

  • @whiteghost1905
    @whiteghost1905 2 года назад +1

    Excellent solution without doubt, but often most of your riddles seems reverse solved. The analogy of bike with fuel is ridiculous, because, if I were to beat someones record by a mile I would rather push the bike for the extra mile. Without time constraint, this solution may not make any sense. Further, consider the spillage every time you have to refuel. Is the road flat?. Then there is "maximum distance that YOU can go", is there a space for ME to sit behind the rider. If the bike has reasonable torque then daisy chain them would be the best solution.

  • @Comedy_baap
    @Comedy_baap 3 года назад +3

    The most awaited video , thanks sir for uploading this video and I have already watch your all videos please upload more videos as early as possible.
    🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад +1

      Yes buddy.. I'll make the videos frequently

  • @porth5165
    @porth5165 3 года назад +1

    travel until the remaining fuel in one motorcycle can fill up the other motorcycles to 100%, discard empty motorcycle, rinse and repeat = (100km/16)+(100km/15)+(100km/14)+....+(100km/2)+(100km/1)= 338km

    • @OrenLikes
      @OrenLikes 3 года назад +1

      partial harmonic series, H16*100km = ~338.073km!

  • @juleskain3905
    @juleskain3905 Год назад +1

    Maximum distance traveled was not specified as from the starting position, so total is 100o kilometers. Driver one goes 50K turns around and returns for 50K, they then refuel the original bike s and they repeats the 100K loop until all fuel is gone. Ten loops is 1000K on Ye Ole Odometer...

  • @dimitristripakis7364
    @dimitristripakis7364 6 месяцев назад

    The goal is to discard as many bikes as soon as possible, so that you don't waste fuel on concurrent bikes when you can avoid it.
    So at 6.25 (=100/16) km all bikes have burned 1/16 tank, so they have 15/16 fuel tank. You can use up one bike to fill up the others.
    So at 6.25 you have 15 bikes full.
    Similarly at another 100/15 = 6.66 km you will have 14 bikes full.
    Etc etc
    So the total distance is 100/16 + 100/15 + 100/14 + 100/13 ....... = 338 km. This is easy to calculcate with a spreadsheet like Excel.

  • @lorensattolucas
    @lorensattolucas 3 года назад +1

    15guys hold the front motorbike , (15 motorbikes at km 100, with 15 full tanks) do it again , and again, and you have 1.600km done
    Considering that when the fuel is gone, the motorbike will ride more 1 km at least, we will have 1616km

  • @ujjwallvsdkdm5895
    @ujjwallvsdkdm5895 3 года назад

    *One of the best channel*

  • @jirtarWorld
    @jirtarWorld 3 года назад

    The optimal are 16 X 100 km. You go get a screw driver, unscrew the other gaz tank, find a chariot, put the gaz tanks on it, you attach the chariot on the "first" bike, and go 1600km!
    Another thing to take in account is the speed at which you "travel", more fast you go, less distance you travel!
    So, saying a tank has a range of "100km" is wrong/false/imcomplete! (or at least, you need to specified a speed, which will be mandatory! 100km range.)
    So if the speed is, i don't know, 100km/h (in the video is 100km/h?) (which is not the "best" speed

    • @jirtarWorld
      @jirtarWorld 3 года назад

      @@literallylegendary6594 And it is why (i will quote myself | maybe you need to learn to read) i said :
      «You go get a screw driver»
      and not
      You use the screw driver given! (or providen)

  • @sathakmusthafahm
    @sathakmusthafahm 3 года назад

    I calculated 500km by just towing the every other bike for 100km by the rider. So on the first 100km 8 bikes fuel will be empty and on the second 100km 4 bikes fuel will be empty and on the third 100km 2 bikes fuel will be empty and on the 4th 100km 1 bike fuel will be empty and the remaining bike will cover another 100 km which adds up to 500 km. This is much more optimal as long as there was no clause that the ignition of all bikes has to be turned on at start

  • @idlingdove5217
    @idlingdove5217 3 года назад

    Maximum distance is1600 km. Take the tanks off 15 bikes and strap them to the back of one bike. Swap empty tank with a full one every 100 km. From my time spent living in many third world countries, that is exactly what the more enterprising members of society would do.

  • @S.G.Wallner
    @S.G.Wallner Год назад +1

    Definitely jumped to the unoptimized solution and was too lazy to figure out the optimized solution.

  • @aryanshrajsaxena6961
    @aryanshrajsaxena6961 2 месяца назад

    Solved this absolutely stunning but easy problem

  • @joelsmith3473
    @joelsmith3473 3 года назад +2

    If you split the bikes into two teams traveling in opposite directions, they can each travel a total of 271¹¹⁄₁₄km and end up a total distance of 543⁴⁄₇km away from each other.

    • @winnewFirst
      @winnewFirst 2 года назад

      That's fantastic thinking. That should be the answer.

  • @ullassasvihallimath9161
    @ullassasvihallimath9161 3 года назад +1

    Sir u should make a video on ur personal life , how u started the you tube channel
    And plz share ur experience with us on this journey

  • @chip_klutzy6384
    @chip_klutzy6384 3 года назад +13

    Believe me or not I figure it out myself after several hours working on it

    • @kush5749
      @kush5749 3 года назад +2

      Okay. Not believing you🤣

    • @rajatpathak6524
      @rajatpathak6524 3 года назад

      @Ethan Goldberger 😂😂 absolutely

  • @kartikkosurkar4907
    @kartikkosurkar4907 2 года назад +2

    Very nice
    I am amazed by your solution but want to know that do you solve them by yourself
    And where do you take such riddles from? Please answer me

  • @manusarda
    @manusarda 3 года назад +3

    Legends know that this is advanced version of camel and 3000 apples 👍
    Because I have done that before, I was able to solve it easily. 😎

  • @briandearing6238
    @briandearing6238 3 года назад

    Thanks for the fun problem.
    Slight note: your calculation at @5:18 of 100/8 = 12.25 should be 12.50, leaving an error in the total. The summation of 100/n for n=1 through n=16 is 338.073 km.

  • @mrgyani
    @mrgyani 3 года назад

    Ans: 338.0728993
    If R is the range, and x is the number of bikes, then the answer is R/x + R/x-1 + R/x-2.. + R/ 1
    Glad to get this one right, totally missed the other similar bike problem - if 3 ppl, 2 on bike and 1 walking - what is the most optimized solution in which they can travel to a destination. I couldn't even think beyond - 2 people on bike and 1 walking all the distance, no exchange 😂..

  • @markf.
    @markf. 3 года назад

    Actually, the answer should be 1600 km. I would hop on the first bike, ride 50 km away, turn around, and ride back. Distance traveled = 100 km. Repeat this 15 more times with all of the other bikes. Total distance traveled = 1600 km.
    The riddle asks for the "maximum distance that we can go." It didn't ask for the furthest distance away from the starting point.

  • @abs1426
    @abs1426 3 года назад +3

    Great puzzle!
    But, believe me each and every Stop/transfer will come with some losses like vaporization, spillage, stoping/starting =% fuel usage which is generally more than rated!
    Firstly i didn't get the solution, because i thought one bike on single run can go upto max 100km😉😉😉! And that my first answer.
    Btw, this was good one!👍🏽

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад

      😀 thanks buddy

    • @palashagrawal2343
      @palashagrawal2343 3 года назад

      we always do the problems ideally even in mechanics,electrical,chemical,etc.

  • @gowrishankardakshnamurthy8441
    @gowrishankardakshnamurthy8441 3 года назад +2

    Well we can use 1 motorcycle to push the other 15 for first 100km and the 2nd can push the rest 14 after 100km and so on and so forth. So the maximum distance you can travel, logically is 1500+ km. This can be done in reality. If done to with 100% accuracy 1600km is possible

    • @phunkydroid
      @phunkydroid 3 года назад

      This can be done in reality? No, in reality a bike's fuel economy is affected quite severely by pulling 15 other bikes behind it.

    • @tn_onyoutube8436
      @tn_onyoutube8436 3 года назад

      Nonsense. If you pushed, or more likely pulled, 15 bikes do you really think you would be able to travel 100km. With all that weight, the friction and wind resistance, impossible to pull at “100% efficiency” as you put it. You would literally be pulling 15 times your own weight. Only a massive truck with a huge engine and torque could do that. I don’t know the efficiency, but I’d estimate you’d at best get 20km of distance, if you could even pull the 15 bikes at all.

  • @megabyte512
    @megabyte512 3 года назад +1

    The maximum distance that can be covered is 1600 km. I had a tool set and took all the tanks off the other motorcycles (While they were sleeping). Strapped them to mine and refilled every 100 km. Total traveled 1600km

    • @hugh.g.rection5906
      @hugh.g.rection5906 3 года назад +1

      i sold the bikes for a round the world plane ticket. he said i had to use the bikes not ride them.

  • @deplorableveteran6860
    @deplorableveteran6860 3 года назад +1

    Or... a trailer can be made from parts of some of the other bikes to haul all the tanks full of gas and be dragged by , and to feed 1 bike , trailer dropped when you are down to 1 tank of full... distance 1600km - (the drag effect of the trailer on full consumption)

  • @SpeedyBozar
    @SpeedyBozar 7 месяцев назад +1

    1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + ... + 1/16 = multiple of 100 km distance

  • @d.SAiNi.
    @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +2

    If we can ignore other factors like losing some fuel by vaporization and spilling while transferring to other bikes and burning more fuel by stopping/starting on small intervals.
    Then you simply can tow other bikes with one bike and cover total distance of 1600kms (ignoring other factors like balancing, burning more fuel by towing other bikes on neutral, etc). 😁😋😋
    Btw nice puzzle and video 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @BrainPermaDeD
      @BrainPermaDeD 3 года назад +1

      Hehe. I also thought the same.

  • @azalcosta427
    @azalcosta427 3 года назад

    I figured it out but I thought that it is making a pattern so it can be added by some other way of progression concept but I had to add them all with calculator.
    If these values can be added by some progression method then please let me know sir.
    I appreciate your work
    Thanks
    Love this channel

  • @somyapratapsingh9849
    @somyapratapsingh9849 3 года назад

    Amazing 🔥

  • @dhruval3129
    @dhruval3129 3 года назад +12

    I solved it. YAYYYYY
    Bro I love your videos. Please upload as more as videos if possible.
    But I got 338.07 kms

    • @LOGICALLYYOURS
      @LOGICALLYYOURS  3 года назад +3

      Due to these uncertain conditions i was a bit occupied... but I'll increase the frequency to make it atleast one video per week.
      You seem to be perfectly on track, might be a little fractional deviation.

    • @dhruval3129
      @dhruval3129 3 года назад +2

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS ok no problem bro. Btw your ENGLISH is awsm.

    • @brgibbons
      @brgibbons 3 года назад +6

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS 100/8 = 12.5, not 12.25

    • @voetbal1231
      @voetbal1231 3 года назад +3

      @@LOGICALLYYOURS I got 338.07 as well. Not just a fractional deviation. The difference of .25 is too much for just a fractional deviation.
      The sum in your video is wrong.

    • @jjbpenguin
      @jjbpenguin 3 года назад +1

      @@voetbal1231 they made a mistake at 100/8 calling it 12.25 when it is 12.5

  • @vishal7583
    @vishal7583 3 года назад +1

    Bro I have Desi approach with which
    We can go upto 500 km theoretically and approximately 400 km practically.
    We have 16 bikes first of all put 8 bikes another 8 bikes they can go upto 100 km after that only 8 bikes have fuel now put 4 bikes on another 4 now we can travell another 100 km
    Now we have only 4 fueled bikes
    So put 2 bikes on another 2 so we will be able to travel another 100 km
    Now we have 2 fueled bikes put 1 one on another we will travel further 100km now we have only bike which travell upto 100 km
    Total distance traveled=500km
    But this solution has one problem that is milage of bikes will be decreased due to increase in weight
    But I don't think that milage will be half .

  • @ericsaucier3816
    @ericsaucier3816 3 года назад +3

    I ended up with 338,072899 km. That's if if you take into account all de imals and you don't round anything.

    • @OrenLikes
      @OrenLikes 3 года назад

      You are more accurate!
      partial harmonic series, H16*100km = ~338.073km.

    • @chadgmiller
      @chadgmiller 3 года назад

      There is a mistake in his milestone #9. 100/8 = 12.5 not 12.25. You are correct.

  • @VilleLiski
    @VilleLiski 3 года назад +3

    The question was written so that it would have allowed one driver to drive a 100 km "loop" just to came back and swap the bike to another with fully loaded tank. Eventually travelling 1600 km (though coming back at the same point eventually)

    • @rushankuma
      @rushankuma 3 года назад +1

      wrong. The question is 'what is the maximum "DISTANCE" that U can go?'

    • @VilleLiski
      @VilleLiski 3 года назад

      @@rushankuma en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distance#/media/File:Distancedisplacement.svg

    • @VilleLiski
      @VilleLiski 3 года назад

      @@rushankuma en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distance#Distance_versus_directed_distance_and_displacement

    • @tn_onyoutube8436
      @tn_onyoutube8436 3 года назад +1

      So, you in fact travel zero distance!

    • @VilleLiski
      @VilleLiski 3 года назад

      @@tn_onyoutube8436 Based on your answer I have to conclude that you did not explore the two links which would have described the terminology.

  • @kaminatto5199
    @kaminatto5199 3 года назад +2

    Wrong, 15 riders will empty their bikes and donate it to the last one so the rider will have enough fuel to drive 1 600 km. Average motorcycle fuel consumption is 4.4 l / 100 k, which is 66 liters from 15 drivers. That is a large bag or suitcase which is possible to have on bike.

  • @phoenixarian8513
    @phoenixarian8513 3 года назад

    I think this is engineering initiative in spacecrafts. Carrying more fuel would increase its weight and therefore not always lengthens the travel distance. It's like a troop of bikes dropping down empty ones to continue journey.

  • @yeshwanthln7621
    @yeshwanthln7621 3 года назад +2

    I solved it correctly....

  • @stevefrandsen7897
    @stevefrandsen7897 3 года назад

    The Strategy mentions "A milestone is reached AS SOON AS the doner bike has enough fuel which can be transferred to the other bike to fully load its tank". That could happen after 1 inch of travel, 2 feet of travel, 8 yards, 3 kilometers, 8 miles, 17 or 44 miles. Needed is a clause such as "while fully emptying its own tank". The formula clears this up some calculating this as 50. Working with 0s and 1s for many years I'm very sticky about good definitions of problems since an unclear one can cause lots of issues and rewrites.

    • @accelerator5524
      @accelerator5524 3 года назад

      even though i dont work with 0 and 1, i also said that you could refill ever km.

    • @freebeerecords
      @freebeerecords 3 года назад

      You could do the feeding continuously and the answer would be the same. Imagine the bikes somehow connected with fuel hoses. One bike feeds all the others to keep them topped up, as well as supplying its own engine, then drops out when it gets empty. With 2 bikes connected this way, one bike basically supplies both engines until it goes empty at 50km then drops out while the remaining bike has been getting topped up so still has a full tank. It’s functionally the same as his solution but with continuous transferring.

    • @brianwade4179
      @brianwade4179 Год назад

      I too noticed that. I like this definition for "milestone": for N bikes riding together, a milestone is reached when the N-1 recipient bikes have enough empty space in their tanks to hold the fuel remaining in the 1 donor bike. This drives home the essential nature of a milestone: it is a point at which we can shed a bike without shedding any of the fuel remaining in the bike. Shedding a bike whenever possible minimizes the cohort's total fuel consumption per kilometer.

  • @SritharBoss
    @SritharBoss 3 года назад +1

    Hold all hands as a chain. Use the bike one by one. Hurray.. You can go max 1600kms

  • @alexandros93
    @alexandros93 3 года назад +2

    I think the solution is 338,072 km but anyways great problem.

    • @OrenLikes
      @OrenLikes 3 года назад

      partial harmonic series, H16*100km = ~338.073km!

  • @jacksonwahomemuthui2687
    @jacksonwahomemuthui2687 3 года назад +3

    There is a big loophole in the framing of the question which gives me the right to misinterpret it.. there is nowhere u mentioned that the bikes have to start at the same time neither did u say that the max distance covered is unidirectional..i could use each bike to town and back then take another bike to town and back and so on...I will have covered a distance of 1600km..

    • @thelosts9940
      @thelosts9940 3 года назад

      One more thing is that you are not forbidden to push à bike that has no fuel and there isnt à limited time period soo i guess you can go on for quite à while even though it might not be easy to push a motorbike like that

  • @sandeepa4116
    @sandeepa4116 3 года назад +2

    Nice puzzle, but what if all the 16 bikes are in line and from rider 2 to rider 16, each rider places his foot on the bike in front of him. Then the last bike which is 16th bike is turned on and toes the next bike keeping the rest 15 bikes' ignition off. After 100km, the 15th bike is turned on and so on.
    This way you dont have to transfer the fuel everytime and also you can travel 16×100=1600 km 😎😎😎

    • @shreyasj6437
      @shreyasj6437 3 года назад

      That's what I thought. But bit difficult to balance the bike i feel

    • @sandeepa4116
      @sandeepa4116 3 года назад +1

      @@shreyasj6437 when they dont have money to buy fuel and when they are ready to transfer fuel from one bike to other with lot of calculations, I think they can take a bit of pain to travel long distance this way🤣🤣
      Just kidding 😂

    • @shreyasj6437
      @shreyasj6437 3 года назад

      @@sandeepa4116 Haha Yeah

    • @d.SAiNi.
      @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +1

      If balancing can be an issue then what about losing some fuel by vaporization and spilling while transferring to other bikes and burning more fuel by stopping/starting on small intervals.
      So you may ignore balance issue (you may tow with rope also) or you must have acknowledged above factors for given solution.

    • @d.SAiNi.
      @d.SAiNi. 3 года назад +1

      So, if you are ignoring other factors, you can tow other bikes with one bike like a train.
      Towing like this will definitely not cover total distance of 1600kms but again we're ignoring other factors here also like burning more fuel by towing other bikes on neutral, balancing etc. So the answer will be 1600kms. 😁😋😋

  • @jgoemat
    @jgoemat 3 года назад

    If you assume each motorcycle has a tank that fits exactly 100km of fuel, and that zero fuel is wasted if you stop and transfer gas to other motorcycles and start again, you can stop as soon as you can fit all the gas into fewer bikes than you are moving with. For instance you start with 1600km worth of fuel. When you get down to 1500km worth of fuel remaining, you can stop and leave one motorcycle (and rider) behind and split his remaining fuel so 15 bikes have full tanks with 100km of fuel. You will have travelled 100/16 km (6.25km) in that time. Continue this until you have only one motorcycle with 100km of fuel remaining and travel the final 100km. This ends up being 338.0729km total distance that one bike can travel.

  • @chinmayaprakash
    @chinmayaprakash 3 года назад

    You might have optimised the maximum possible distance that one of the riders can cover theoretically, but practically, riding for 50 kms before taking a break to cannibalize petrol of one of the fellow riders is not only simpler, but a consistently predictable riding break after every 50 kms helps avoid unnecessary confusion and chaos. As an experienced group rider, I can attest to the fact that as a group of 16 riders with a target distance of 300-350 kms for the final rider, 15 riding breaks is definitely not optimal compared to 4. I can easily coordinate and organise a group of 16 riders by giving them a simple directive: ride in groups of two, and after 50 kms, those of you who are riding ahead, take a 15 minutes break to prepare the next phase of the ride, during which time refill your tank from your ride partner who is staying behind, and pair up with your assigned ride partner for the next 50 kms. Can you imagine the logistic nightmare of coordinating a group of riders who will become increasingly tired and have to stop at non-uniform interval of distances, most of which are not rounded figures, but have up to 3 decimal places, which does not show up on odometer/ trip meter information display panel of any bike?! And I have not yet broached the topic of reduced fuel efficiency when you cover 338 kms with 15 breaks when compared to covering 300 kms with only 4 riding breaks. And don't even get me started on how you plan to distribute fuel in precisely equal amounts to 15 bikes in the first instance, a calculation which is not going to get easier with subsequent riding breaks, especially with some difficult prime numbers waiting in line to test your calculation skills. So you tell me: which alternative is more optimised?!😝

  • @NTIRUPATHIJAYAPARASURAM
    @NTIRUPATHIJAYAPARASURAM 3 года назад

    Sir please explain the concepts about lateral thing, out side the box, optimization. And also explain
    When we have to use those concepts

  • @decoder6878
    @decoder6878 3 года назад +1

    Very nice

  • @mpeterll
    @mpeterll 3 года назад

    With all the extra stopping, starting and accelerating after so many stops, not to mention the inefficiency of the fuel transfers and additional nonproductive distance during the transfer stops, you're going to waste more than the 37km you supposedly gain.

  • @christian9540
    @christian9540 2 года назад +1

    You cannot exchange the fuel without tools. Tools are not mentioned... but that each bike has a rider?! Also "maximum distance" could also be just 1600km. Two flaws that breaks the riddle upfront.

  • @NonRandomUser
    @NonRandomUser 3 года назад +1

    Yes, it is optimal to sacrifice 15 riders so the remaining one can be stranded on the other side,
    unable to make the entire 300+ km trek back on a 100km/tank.

  • @SlidellRobotics
    @SlidellRobotics 3 года назад

    Good one, but milestone 9 will be 12.5, not 12.25km from milestone 8. That gets you another 250m. You also left another 4.899m+ out by rounding everything down to the integer meter.

  • @hendrikusscherphof7348
    @hendrikusscherphof7348 3 года назад

    I was going to suggest to just push the bike when you run out of fuel. But upon rereading the problem, we need to have the ''maximum distance that *you* can go''. So just ditch the bikes and go for a long walk. easy solve

  • @ManojKumar-qt4mg
    @ManojKumar-qt4mg 3 года назад +7

    My initial approach was one guy towing the rest 15 guys until his tank empties and one among the rwst 15 takes his turn totalling to 1600kms

    • @hemanthsundarapalli6652
      @hemanthsundarapalli6652 3 года назад

      🤪

    • @oenrn
      @oenrn 3 года назад

      It would take more fuel to carry 16 bikes a certain distance than just one. Towing is not an energy-free process.

    • @mchoi815
      @mchoi815 3 года назад

      @@oenrn If you assume the fuel required is proportional to the weight, you would still get the same result: (1/16 + 1/15 + ... + 1)*100. You also improve on the time complexity (no fuel transfer) and context switching overhead (stopping and starting will reduce fuel efficiency) with zero cost for distance.
      Intuitively, it makes sense that the distance comes out the same, because when rider n transfers 1/(16-n) fuel, it's as if rider n is reimbursing the fuel per rider for the distance just covered.

  • @stevejoyce876
    @stevejoyce876 3 года назад

    I believe the correct answer is 1600 km. I can ride each bike for 100 km, returning to the beginning. So I would travel A TOTAL DISTANCE OF 1600 KM.

  • @karthiks5722
    @karthiks5722 3 года назад

    When I solved this I got 500 km....16 bikes will be grouped into 8 pairs.....In each pair one bike will be running and other will be switched off, basically one bike tolls the other, by placing the leg on the running bike....after 100 km, 8 bikes will be grouped into 4 pairs....after 200 km 4 bikes will be grouped into 2 pairs and after 300 km we have 2 bikes, one tolls the other....after 400 km the last bike will go another 100km so we will get as 500 km in total

  • @yuvrajlabana313
    @yuvrajlabana313 3 года назад +1

    Nice