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No, that would more than likely make it a PR4 or possibly a PR3 if they were "low" PR4's with a lot of other links on the pages. It would take a lot more than just that to have a PR5 - and not all PR4 links are equal, nor are all PR5 links equal.
I think the analysis you've done is far too simplistic - the more links from a page, the less each is worth...
You need to read the paper that James_Dale refers to!
Regards
DerekH
To get PR5.0, you need six links from PR5.0 pages, each with six links on it.
Or six links from PR4.0 pages, each with one link on it.
Or six links from PR6.0 pages, each with one thirty six links on it.
Or one link from a PR5.0 page, with one link on it.
Or one link from a PR6.0 page, with six links on it.
Or thirty six links from PR5.0 pages, each with thirty six links on it.
Or thirty six links from PR4.0 pages, each with six links on it.
Or thirty six links from PR3.0 pages, each with one links on it.
You can play with the figures:
LOG6(6^PL * NL / LPP)
6 = Toolbar log base
PL = Toolbar PR of the links you're getting to the page.
NL = Number of links you're getting to the page.
LPP = Number of links per page that links to you (assuming no two links to the same URL on a page, and no links to /robots.txt excluded or HTTP status 404 URLs)