How do you solve #7^x=5^(x-4)#? Precalculus Solving Exponential and Logarithmic Equations Logarithmic Models 1 Answer George C. Aug 22, 2015 Take #log# of both sides and use properties of #log# of exponents to find: #x = (-4log(5))/(log(7) - log(5)) ~~ -19.133# Explanation: Take #log# of both sides to get: #x log(7) = log(7^x) = log(5^(x-4)) = (x - 4) log(5)# #= x log(5) - 4 log(5)# Subtract #x log(5)# from both sides to get: #x (log(7) - log(5)) = -4log(5)# Divide both sides by #(log(7) - log(5))# to get: #x = (-4log(5))/(log(7) - log(5)) ~~ -19.133# Answer link Related questions What is a logarithmic model? How do I use a logarithmic model to solve applications? What is the advantage of a logarithmic model? How does the Richter scale measure magnitude? What is the range of the Richter scale? How do you solve #9^(x-4)=81#? How do you solve #logx+log(x+15)=2#? How do you solve the equation #2 log4(x + 7)-log4(16) = 2#? How do you solve #2 log x^4 = 16#? How do you solve #2+log_3(2x+5)-log_3x=4#? See all questions in Logarithmic Models Impact of this question 1214 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License