Start both at the same time, flip each when time runs out. The 5 minute will be turned 3 times totalling 15 minutes. The 8 minute will be flipped twice totalling 16 minutes. Once the 15 minutes is up on the 5 minute timers, there is one minute left on the 8 minute timer.
you put the 9minute timer and the 2minute timer on together when the 2min timer finishes flip it 2min timer to make 4mins. when the 2min timer is finished start timing the egg and wait for the 9min one to finish :)
1 hour = 60 minutes. Half an hour = 60/2 = 30 minutes. 30 minutes = 30/3 = 10 turns on a 3-minute timer PROVIDED the timer is turned at exactly the right moment and turning the timer takes no time at all.
To calculate the hours and minutes worked you could simply start a timer when you get to work and stop it when you leave. Do this every day until it is time to turn in your hours and minutes worked. The amount on the timer will be your total.
Angle of 360 degrees = 1 hour = 60 minutes of time so 6 degrees = 1 minute of time so 72 degrees = 12 minutes of time. I have used "minutes of time" as the unit of time to avoid confusion with minute as a unit in which angles are measured (1/60 degree).
Start both timers, when the four minute timer is done, there will be 3 minutes of sand left in the top of the seven minute timer.Restart the four minute timer, while letting the remaining (3 minutes) of sand to drop from the 7 minute timer. (this is your 1st 3 minutes of your nine minute measurement)When the 7 minute timer is done the 4 minute timer will now have 3 minutes of sand in the bottom. Flip the 4 minute timer (when this runs it will be your second 3 minutes of time). At the same time flip the 7 minute timer.When the 3 minutes of sand run on the 4 minute timer, restart the 7 minute timer by this time 3 minutes worth of sand will have gone to the bottom of the timer, resetting it will give you the last 3 minutes of sand for you last 3 minutes of time measuring the 9 nine minutes.
you flip both timers (with all of the sand on one side) and once the five minute timer runs out the first time, you flip the five minute timer. Once the nine minute timer runs out, you flip the five minute timer again. After the five minute timer has run out, it will have been 13 minutes. (5+4+4=13)
Start both at the same time, flip each when time runs out. The 5 minute will be turned 3 times totalling 15 minutes. The 8 minute will be flipped twice totalling 16 minutes. Once the 15 minutes is up on the 5 minute timers, there is one minute left on the 8 minute timer.
you put the 9minute timer and the 2minute timer on together when the 2min timer finishes flip it 2min timer to make 4mins. when the 2min timer is finished start timing the egg and wait for the 9min one to finish :)
start the both of them at the same time, when 3 mins is up there is 4 mins left on the 7 minute timer. so reset the timer and start again. when that finishes that is 11 mins
Use the fact that 4 and 7 have no common prime factors. If you run both timers at the same time, restarting each one whenever it rings, then sooner or later the seven-minute timer will go off two minutes after the four-minute timer did - and then you're in business. In detail: m0: start both timers m4: timer 4 rings, restart it m7: timer 7 rings, restart it m8: timer 4 rings, restart it m12: timer 4 rings, start cooking the egg m14: timer 7 rings, restart it m21: timer 7 rings, take out the egg. The egg went in at minute 12 and came out at minute 21 - nine minutes of cooking. This works because the 7-minute timer rang two minutes after the 4-minute timer did; the seven-minute timer times the last stretch. You can also make the 4-minute timer time the last stretch, and this is actually quicker (I just realized): m0: start both timers m4: timer 4 rings, restart it m7: timer 7 rings, put in the egg m8: timer 4 rings, restart it m12: timer 4 rings, restart it m16: timer 4 rings, take out the egg The egg went in at minute 7 and came out at minute 16, which means it cooked for nine minutes.
1 hour = 60 minutes. Half an hour = 60/2 = 30 minutes. 30 minutes = 30/3 = 10 turns on a 3-minute timer PROVIDED the timer is turned at exactly the right moment and turning the timer takes no time at all.
You have two hour glass: 11 minutes and 7 minutes.Problem, time an egg cooking for fifteen minutes.Step 1. Put water on to boil, as you want the water boiling when you cook an egg.Step 2. Start both the 11 and the 7 minute timersStep 3. When the seven minute timer runs out, you still have four minutes left on the eleven minute timer (11-7=4). Put the Egg in the water now and wait four minutes.Step 4. When the eleven minute timer runs out (the egg has been in the water for four minutes), turn it over and wait till it runs out again.Step 5. When the eleven minute timer runs out the second time the egg is done.4 minutes + 11 minutes = 15 minutes.Step 6. Run the egg under cold water for a minute to cool the shellStep 7. Peel egg and cut into quarters, lightly salt to taste.Step 8. Enjoy eating your hard boiled egg.
It is unknown when the sand timer, also known as the hourglass, was invented. There are records of sand timers being used as early as the 1300s when they were a preferred timepiece for sailing, as other forms of keeping time were not reliable on the swaying ships.
Start both sand clocks off at the same time. When the 7-minute clock runs out turn it over. When the 11-minute clock runs out turn it over. START TIMING. When the 7-minute clock next runs out it will have been 3 minutes.
As a reminder to do some chore or errand, to time something that is cooking, as an aid to teach children how long 5 or 10 minutes is, to jar you awake from that 15 minute power nap.
Equipment: Bench Timer Method: Record how many times your heart beats in a minute whilst resting. Time five minutes on a timer and press start. Step up and down on the bench for this amount of time. As soon as five minutes is up, sit down and now count how many times your heart beats after exercise. At the end of the minute, if your heart has not returned to it's original heart rate, time another minute. Repeat this until your heart rate returns to your resting heart rate. If it took one minute for your heart beat to return to normal, then your recovery rate is one minute etc. :)