| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.03 |
| Score | 0% | 61% |
Two or more pulleys used together are called:
gears |
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third-class lever |
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block and tackle |
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wheel and axle |
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.
| 6 | |
| 3 | |
| 8 | |
| 9 |
Mechanical advantage (MA) can be calculated knowing only the distance the effort (blue arrow) moves and the distance the resistance (green box) moves. The equation is:
MA = \( \frac{E_d}{R_d} \)
where Ed is the effort distance and Rd is the resistance distance. For this problem, the equation becomes:
MA = \( \frac{4 ft.}{1.33 ft.} \) = 3
You might be wondering how having an effort distance of 3 times the resistance distance is an advantage. Remember the principle of moments. For a lever in equilibrium the effort torque equals the resistance torque. Because torque is force x distance, if the effort distance is 3 times the resistance distance, the effort force must be \( \frac{1}{3} \) the resistance force. You're trading moving 3 times the distance for only having to use \( \frac{1}{3} \) the force.
The standard unit of energy is the:
Joule |
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Volt |
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Watt |
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Horsepower |
The Joule (J) is the standard unit of energy and has the unit \({kg \times m^2} \over s^2\).
Which of the following statements about drag is false?
slower objects experience more drag than faster objects |
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the amount of drag depends on the speed of an object |
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drag occurs during movement through a fluid |
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the amount of drag depends on the shape of an object |
Drag is friction that opposes movement through a fluid like liquid or air. The amount of drag depends on the shape and speed of the object with slower objects experiencing less drag than faster objects and more aerodynamic objects experiencing less drag than those with a large leading surface area.
Which class of lever offers no mechanical advantage?
none of these, all levers offer mechanical advantage |
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third |
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second |
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first |
A third-class lever is used to increase distance traveled by an object in the same direction as the force applied. The fulcrum is at one end of the lever, the object at the other, and the force is applied between them. This lever does not impart a mechanical advantage as the effort force must be greater than the load but does impart extra speed to the load. Examples of third-class levers are shovels and tweezers.