Years ago someone posted an actual question on here. It was regarding conveyor belt speeds, nothing particularly complex.
Anyway, it was a great question because
1. There were LOTS of numbers given in the question. Many of them were seemingly related but superfluous to the solution. This is much more realistic than textbook problems. Textbooks typically give you exactly what you need to solve the problem. No more, no less. To the point where if you get an answer without using all of the givens, you've probably done it wrong! In the real world, you almost always have available much more information than the bare minimum to solve the problem. You must be able to quickly understand the situation and realize which things are actually necessary.
2. There was ONE piece of info missing to solve the problem using the full gear train analysis, which would have been the straightforward sort of "textbook" type solution. However, it would have easily been determinable by a quick physical look at the system. This is also very real-world, becuase you often have to recognize what info you currently lack to solve your problem.
3. The solution was actually determinable without doing a full gear train analysis by recognizing a couple of ratios.
I had copied it myself into a word document for a similar purpose, but unfortunately I don't have access to it anymore.
Edit: Well daggum, I found the post... When I made the Word doc I think I dressed it up a little more with a diagram or something...