If you will pardon the pun, this is a diabolical problem from the collection Five Hundred Mathematical Challenges.
“Problem 5. Calculate the sum![]()
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It has a non-calculus solution, but that involves a bunch of manipulations that were not that evident to me, or at least I doubt if I could have come up with them. I was able to reframe the problem using one of my favorite approaches, power series (or polynomials). The calculations are a bit hairy in any case, but I was impressed that my method worked at all.
See the Number of the Beast for solutions.

Here is another Brain Bogglers problem from 1987.
This 2005 four-star problem from Colin Hughes at Maths Challenge is also a bit challenging.
This 2007 four-star problem from Colin Hughes at Maths Challenge is definitely a bit challenging.
This is a challenging problem from Mathematical Quickies (1967).
I was astonished that this problem was suitable for 8th graders. First of all the formula for the volume of a cone is one of the least-remembered of formulas, and I certainly never remember it. So my only viable approach was calculus, which is probably not a suitable solution for an 8th grader.
This is an old problem I had seen before. Here is David Wells’s rendition:
I came across the following problem from an Italian high school exam on the British 