| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.27 |
| Score | 0% | 65% |
The mechanical advantage of a wheel and axle is equal to the:
difference in the lengths of the axles |
|
difference in the diameters of the wheels |
|
length of the axle |
|
ratio of the diameters of the wheels |
A wheel and axle uses two different diameter wheels mounted to a connecting axle. Force is applied to the larger wheel and large movements of this wheel result in small movements in the smaller wheel. Because a larger movement distance is being translated to a smaller distance, force is increased with a mechanical advantage equal to the ratio of the diameters of the wheels. An example of a wheel and axle is the steering wheel of a car.
If the handles of a wheelbarrow are 3 ft. from the wheel axle, what force must you exert to lift the handles if it's carrying a 270 lb. load concentrated at a point 0.5 ft. from the axle?
0.83 lbs |
|
810 lbs |
|
45 lbs |
|
90 lbs |
This problem describes a second-class lever and, for a second class lever, the effort force multiplied by the effort distance equals the resistance force multipied by the resistance distance: Fede = Frdr. Plugging in the variables from this problem yields:
Fe x 3 ft. = 270 lbs x 0.5 ft
Fe = 135 ft-lb. / 3 ft
Fe = 45 lbs
A block and tackle with four pulleys would have a mechanical advantage of:
0 |
|
2 |
|
4 |
|
1 |
Two or more pulleys used together constitute a block and tackle which, unlike a fixed pulley, does impart mechanical advantage as a function of the number of pulleys that make up the arrangement. So, for example, a block and tackle with three pulleys would have a mechanical advantage of three.
The standard unit of energy is the:
Horsepower |
|
Volt |
|
Watt |
|
Joule |
The Joule (J) is the standard unit of energy and has the unit \({kg \times m^2} \over s^2\).
Gear ratio indicates which of the following about two connected gears?
power conversion |
|
work done |
|
mechanical advantage |
|
efficiency |
The mechanical advantage (amount of change in speed or torque) of connected gears is proportional to the number of teeth each gear has. Called gear ratio, it's the ratio of the number of teeth on the larger gear to the number of teeth on the smaller gear. For example, a gear with 12 teeth connected to a gear with 9 teeth would have a gear ratio of 4:3.