| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.90 |
| Score | 0% | 58% |
The mechanical advantage of a third class lever is always:
less than one |
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equal to one |
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not equal to one |
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greater than one |
A third class lever is designed to multiply distance and speed at the expense of effort force. Because the effort force is greater than the resistance, the mechanical advantage of a third class lever is always less than one.
An example of a third class lever is a broom. The fulcrum is at your hand on the end of the broom, the effort force is your other hand in the middle, and the resistance is at the bottom bristles. The effort force of your hand in the middle multiplies the distance and speed of the bristles at the bottom but at the expense of producing a brushing force that's less than the force you're applying with your hand.
Tension is a force that does which of the following?
heats up an object |
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compacts an object |
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stretches an object |
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slows an object |
Tension is a force that stretches or elongates something. When a cable or rope is used to pull an object, for example, it stretches internally as it accepts the weight that it's moving. Although tension is often treated as applying equally to all parts of a material, it's greater at the places where the material is under the most stress.
Which of the following is not a type of structural load?
live load |
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wind load |
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dead load |
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occupancy load |
Dead load is the weight of the building and materials, live load is additional weight due to occupancy or use, snow load is the weight of accumulated snow on a structure and wind load is the force of wind pressures against structure surfaces.
Specific gravity is a comparison of the density of an object with the density of:
oil |
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air |
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carbon |
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water |
Specific gravity is the ratio of the density of equal volumes of a substance and water and is measured by a hyrdometer.
A wedge is most similar to what other type of simple machine?
second-class lever |
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first-class lever |
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third-class lever |
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inclined plane |
The wedge is a moving inclined plane that is used to lift, hold, or break apart an object. A wedge converts force applied to its blunt end into force perpendicular to its inclined surface. In contrast to a stationary plane where force is applied to the object being moved, with a wedge the object is stationary and the force is being applied to the plane. Examples of a wedge include knives and chisels.