Paper IPaper I · General Mental Ability

Clocks and Calendars

Clock angles, hands together and opposite, gaining time, odd days, leap years, and day-of-week calculation, with worked examples and practice

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PaperPaper ISubjectGMASyllabusGeneral Mental Ability: logical reasoning, quantitative aptitude including numerical abilityImportanceMedium
GMAReasoningQuantitative AptitudeClocksCalendarsOdd DaysPaper 1

Two small but reliable topics. Both reward a memorised formula and a calm head rather than long working. Clocks are a geometry-of-angles problem on a 360 degree dial; calendars are a remainder problem in modulo 7. They build on the divisibility and remainder ideas in number system and simplification.

Clocks: the basic rates

A clock face is 360°, divided into 12 hours, so each hour mark is 30° apart. There are 60 minutes, so each minute mark is 6° apart.

Hand Rate
Minute hand 360° in 60 minutes = 6° per minute
Hour hand 360° in 720 minutes (12 hours) = 0.5° per minute
Relative gain (minute over hour) 6 - 0.5 = 5.5° per minute

The minute hand gains 5.5° on the hour hand every minute. This single number drives almost every clock question.

Clocks: core formulas

Concept Rule
Angle between hands abs( 30 times H minus 5.5 times M ), where H is the hour and M the minutes
Hands coincide (overlap) 11 times every 12 hours, so once every 720/11 = 65 and 5/11 minutes
Hands at right angle (90°) 22 times every 12 hours
Hands in a straight line (180°, opposite) 11 times every 12 hours
Faulty clock gaining or losing compare against the true 24 hour day

Note: in 12 hours the hands overlap only 11 times (not 12), because between 11 and 1 o'clock they overlap just once, at 12 o'clock. The same logic gives 11 straight-line positions and 22 right angles per 12 hours.

Calendars: odd days

The day of the week repeats every 7 days, so only the remainder after dividing by 7 matters. That remainder is called the number of odd days.

Period Odd days
Ordinary year (365 days) 365 mod 7 = 1
Leap year (366 days) 366 mod 7 = 2
100 years 5
200 years 3
300 years 1
400 years 0

A leap year is divisible by 4, except century years, which must be divisible by 400. So 2000 was a leap year, but 1900 was not.

Odd days in a month

Months Odd days
31-day months (Jan, Mar, May, Jul, Aug, Oct, Dec) 3
30-day months (Apr, Jun, Sep, Nov) 2
February (ordinary) 0
February (leap) 1

Day-of-week reference

Map the odd-day count to a day, counting from a known anchor. A standard convention takes 0 odd days as Sunday: 0 Sunday, 1 Monday, 2 Tuesday, 3 Wednesday, 4 Thursday, 5 Friday, 6 Saturday. Whichever anchor you use, apply it consistently within one problem.

Worked examples

Example 1: Angle between hands

Find the angle between the hands at 3:40.

Angle = abs( 30 times 3 minus 5.5 times 40 ) = abs( 90 minus 220 ) = abs( minus 130 ) = 130°.

Example 2: When do hands overlap after 4 o'clock

At 4:00 the hour hand is at 120°, the minute hand at 0. The minute hand must close a 120 degree gap, gaining 5.5° per minute.

Time = 120 / 5.5 = 21 and 9/11 minutes. So the hands coincide at about 4:21 and 9/11.

Example 3: Right angle after 3 o'clock

At 3:00 the gap is 90° (hour hand at 90, minute hand at 0). For the next right angle the minute hand must reach 90° ahead minus or plus 90.

To be 90° apart the first time, the minute hand needs to gain 90 minus 90 = 0 (it is already 90 behind, but they are 90 apart at exactly 3:00). The next 90 degree position needs a relative change of 180°: 180 / 5.5 = 32 and 8/11 minutes, so at about 3:32 and 8/11.

Example 4: Faulty clock

A clock gains 5 minutes every hour. If it is set correctly at 8:00 a.m., what is the true time when it shows 2:00 p.m.?

The faulty clock shows 6 hours elapsed (8 a.m. to 2 p.m.). It runs fast: in 65 of its own minutes only 60 true minutes pass. So 6 hours = 360 shown minutes correspond to 360 times 60/65 = 332.3 true minutes, which is about 5 hours 32 minutes. True time is roughly 1:32 p.m.

Example 5: Odd days and day of week

If 1 January 2020 was a Wednesday, what day was 1 January 2021?

2020 is a leap year (divisible by 4, not a century), so it carries 2 odd days. Wednesday plus 2 days = Friday.

Example 6: Day of a given date

What day of the week was 15 August 1947?

Count odd days up to that date from the 400-year and year-by-year rules. The accepted result is Friday. India became independent on a Friday. For any unfamiliar date, build the total odd days from completed centuries, the years since, the leap years among them, and the days in the current year, then map the remainder to a day.

Shortcut tips

  • The angle formula abs(30H minus 5.5M) is the workhorse; if it exceeds 180, subtract from 360 to get the smaller angle.
  • The hands overlap every 65 and 5/11 minutes, not every 60 minutes; a clock whose hands meet every 65 minutes by the watch is running correct, one that meets every 60 minutes is running fast.
  • For odd days, only the remainder modulo 7 matters; reduce big day counts to 0 through 6 immediately.
  • Century leap-year trap: 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100 are not leap years; 1600, 2000, 2400 are.
  • Same date next ordinary year moves one weekday forward; across a leap year it moves two.

Practice questions

  1. Find the angle between the hands at 9:00.
  2. Find the angle between the hands at 6:30.
  3. How many times in 12 hours are the two hands at right angles?
  4. After 5 o'clock, when do the hands first coincide?
  5. A watch loses 3 minutes per hour. Set right at 6 a.m., what does it show at the true time 6 a.m. the next day?
  6. How many odd days are there in 300 years?
  7. If 1 January 2024 is a Monday, what day is 1 January 2025? (2024 is a leap year.)
  8. How many leap years are there from 2001 to 2100 inclusive?
  9. If today is Tuesday, what day will it be after 100 days?
  10. Find the angle between the hands at 4:20.

Answer key

Reveal the answer key and full worked solutions
  1. abs(30 times 9 minus 5.5 times 0) = abs(270) = 270; the smaller angle is 360 minus 270 = 90°.
  2. abs(30 times 6 minus 5.5 times 30) = abs(180 minus 165) = 15°.
  3. 22 times.
  4. At 5:00 the gap is 150°; 150 / 5.5 = 27 and 3/11 minutes, so about 5:27 and 3/11.
  5. In 24 true hours it loses 24 times 3 = 72 minutes, so it shows 24 hours minus 72 minutes = 22 hours 48 minutes after 6 a.m., that is 4:48 a.m.
  6. From the century table, 300 years carry 1 odd day. (Check: 100 years give 5, so 300 give 15, and 15 mod 7 = 1.)
  7. 2024 is a leap year, carrying 2 odd days. Monday plus 2 = Wednesday.
  8. 2100 is a century not divisible by 400, so it is not a leap year. Leap years are 2004, 2008, ..., 2096, which is (2096 minus 2004)/4 + 1 = 24 leap years.
  9. 100 mod 7 = 2. Tuesday plus 2 = Thursday.
  10. abs(30 times 4 minus 5.5 times 20) = abs(120 minus 110) = 10°.

See also

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