Pipes & Cistern
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Shortcut Techniques
Study MaterialShortcut Techniques – Pipes & Cisterns
Shortcut techniques in Pipes & Cisterns help candidates solve filling and emptying problems quickly and accurately in SSC, Banking, Railway, Insurance, Defence, CAT, CDS, NDA, and various competitive examinations.
Most questions from this chapter are based on:
- Inlet and Outlet Pipes
- Combined Filling Rates
- Leakage Problems
- Tank Filling and Emptying
- Efficiency Concepts
- Time and Work Applications
Learning shortcut methods reduces lengthy calculations and improves solving speed significantly.
Golden Formula of Pipes & Cisterns
Work Done = Rate × Time
Shortcut #1: One Hour Work Method
If a pipe fills a tank in x hours:
Work Done in 1 Hour = 1/x
Example:
If a pipe fills a tank in 5 hours:
One-hour work = 1/5
✔ Almost every Pipes & Cistern question is solved using one-hour work.
Shortcut #2: Outlet Pipe Shortcut
If a pipe empties a tank in y hours:
Emptying Work in 1 Hour = −1/y
Outlet work is always treated as negative work.
Shortcut #3: Combined Filling Shortcut
If two pipes fill a tank in x and y hours:
Combined Work = (1/x + 1/y)
Time taken:
Combined Time = xy / (x + y)
Shortcut #4: Fill and Empty Together
If one pipe fills and another empties:
Net Work = (1/x − 1/y)
This is one of the most important formulas.
Shortcut #5: LCM Method
Take tank capacity as LCM of given times.
Example:
If pipes fill in 4 hr and 6 hr:
LCM = 12
Then:
- Pipe A fills 3 units/hr
- Pipe B fills 2 units/hr
This method avoids fractions completely.
Shortcut #6: Efficiency Shortcut
Efficiency is inversely proportional to time.
Efficiency ∝ 1 / Time
Smaller time means higher efficiency.
Shortcut #7: Leakage Shortcut
If:
- Tank fills in x hr without leak
- Tank fills in y hr with leak
Then:
Leakage Work:
(1/x − 1/y)
Shortcut #8: Net Filling Concept
If:
- Filling rate > Emptying rate → Tank fills
- Emptying rate > Filling rate → Tank empties
Shortcut #9: Alternate Opening Method
If pipes open alternately:
- Calculate work for one complete cycle.
- Find remaining work separately.
Shortcut #10: Quick Formula for Three Pipes
If three pipes fill in x, y, and z hours:
Combined Work = (1/x + 1/y + 1/z)
Shortcut #11: Partial Tank Shortcut
If part of the tank is already filled:
- Calculate remaining fraction only.
- Apply net work on remaining portion.
Shortcut #12: Negative Work Trick
Remember:
| Pipe Type | Work Sign |
|---|---|
| Inlet Pipe | Positive (+) |
| Outlet Pipe | Negative (−) |
Shortcut #13: Fast Calculation Using Units
Instead of fractions:
- Take total work as LCM.
- Convert all pipes into units/hour.
- Solve using simple arithmetic.
This method saves maximum time in exams.
Shortcut #14: Time Formula Shortcut
Time taken:
Time = Total Work / Net Efficiency
Shortcut #15: Equivalent Pipe Concept
Two smaller pipes together may work like one larger pipe.
Always combine efficiencies first.
Shortcut #16: Tank Never Fills Condition
If outlet efficiency ≥ inlet efficiency:
Tank Will Never Fill
Shortcut #17: Ratio Shortcut
If Pipe A is twice as efficient as Pipe B:
Time Ratio:
A : B = 1 : 2
Shortcut #18: Combined Time Shortcut
For two filling pipes:
xy / (x + y)
For one filling and one emptying pipe:
xy / (y − x)
Shortcut #19: Quick Revision Formula Table
| Concept | Shortcut Formula |
|---|---|
| Filling Work | 1/x |
| Emptying Work | −1/y |
| Combined Filling | (1/x + 1/y) |
| Combined Net Work | (1/x − 1/y) |
| Combined Time | xy/(x+y) |
| Leakage Work | (1/x − 1/y) |
| Efficiency | 1/Time |
Shortcut #20: Most Important Exam Tricks
- Use LCM method to avoid fractions.
- Remember outlet work is negative.
- Convert every problem into one-hour work.
- Practice leakage problems regularly.
- Use direct efficiency methods.
- Avoid lengthy calculations.
- Practice previous year aptitude questions.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Ignoring outlet negative work.
- Using wrong combined formulas.
- Calculation mistakes in fractions.
- Ignoring leakage effects.
- Confusing efficiency and time relationships.
Important Exam Tips
- Memorize all important formulas thoroughly.
- Practice combined-pipe problems daily.
- Improve fraction simplification speed.
- Use LCM-based unit methods.
- Practice alternate-opening questions regularly.
- Focus on net work concepts.
- Practice previous year aptitude questions.
Shortcut techniques in Pipes & Cisterns help candidates improve calculation speed, logical analysis, and accuracy in solving competitive examination aptitude questions efficiently.