| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.93 |
| Score | 0% | 59% |
Which of the following will increase the mechanical advantage of a second-class lever?
move the object being lifted farther away from the fulcrum |
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decrease the length of the lever |
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move the fulcrum between the force and the object being lifted |
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move the object being lifted closer to the fulcrum |
A second-class lever is used to increase force on an object in the same direction as the force is applied. This lever requires a smaller force to lift a larger load but the force must be applied over a greater distance. The fulcrum is placed at one end of the lever and mechanical advantage increases as the object being lifted is moved closer to the fulcrum or the length of the lever is increased. An example of a second-class lever is a wheelbarrow.
The principle of moments defines equilibrium in terms of:
power |
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torque |
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energy |
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speed |
According to the principle of moments, you can maintain equilibrium if the moments (forces) tending to clockwise rotation are equal to the moments tending to counterclockwise rotation. Another name for these moments of force is torque.
| 4 | |
| 7 | |
| -3 | |
| 3.6 |
The mechanical advantage (MA) of an inclined plane is the effort distance divided by the resistance distance. In this case, the effort distance is the length of the ramp and the resistance distance is the height of the green box:
MA = \( \frac{d_e}{d_r} \) = \( \frac{36 ft.}{9 ft.} \) = 4
A screw is most like which of the following other simple machines?
inclined plane |
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first-class lever |
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wheel and axle |
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block and tackle |
A screw is an inclined plane wrapped in ridges (threads) around a cylinder. The distance between these ridges defines the pitch of the screw and this distance is how far the screw advances when it is turned once. The mechanical advantage of a screw is its circumference divided by the pitch.
Assuming force applied remains constant, which of the following will result in more work being done?
moving the object farther |
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increasing the coefficient of friction |
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moving the object with more speed |
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moving the object with more acceleration |
Work is accomplished when force is applied to an object: W = Fd where F is force in newtons (N) and d is distance in meters (m). Thus, the more force that must be applied to move an object, the more work is done and the farther an object is moved by exerting force, the more work is done.