Rhiannon from St Mary Redcliffe Primary School thought hard about the first part of this problem:
I worked out all the numbers that would go into the smallest number (24) and tested each of them out by using a calculator to divide them into the other numbers (56, 112, and 216).That's a great method - well done, Rhiannon. (Luca from Devonshire Primary School told us that the possibilities for the first challenge were 1, 2, 4 and 8, so 8 is indeed the largest.)
In a great team effort, Class 7P at Loretto Junior School sent us a solution to the second part of the problem:
In the second problem the numbers coming out were all odd. So we thought the multiply number would be odd.