truncation would keep the relative properties of the hash (of course you'd loose entropy, but it's a linear reduction). So truncating a secure 256 bit hash down to say 16 bits would keep collision resistance within the 2^16 space.
This is in effect how bitcoin algorithm works. There's a target number of leading 0's in the hash that you have to "proof of work" to generate a hash. This is the same problem as truncating the hash to be the length of the target.
With what you showed as a problem set, you could treat a 512 bit hash function as a base 256 number 512 digits long, then converting …