| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.93 |
| Score | 0% | 59% |
One Horsepower (hp) is equal to how many watts?
746 |
|
9.8 |
|
1492 |
|
1 |
Power is the rate at which work is done, P = w/t, or work per unit time. The watt (W) is the unit for power and is equal to 1 joule (or newton-meter) per second. Horsepower (hp) is another familiar unit of power used primarily for rating internal combustion engines. 1 hp equals 746 watts.
Force of friction due to kinetic friction is __________ the force of friction due to static friction.
lower than |
|
the same as |
|
higher than |
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opposite |
The formula for force of friction (Ff) is the same whether kinetic or static friction applies: Ff = μFN. To distinguish between kinetic and static friction, μk and μs are often used in place of μ.
| 495 lbs. | |
| 99 lbs. | |
| 297 lbs. | |
| 24.75 lbs. |
To balance this lever the torques at the green box and the blue arrow must be equal. Torque is weight x distance from the fulcrum so the equation for equilibrium is:
Rada = Rbdb
where a represents the green box and b the blue arrow, R is resistance (weight/force) and d is the distance from the fulcrum.Solving for Ra, our missing value, and plugging in our variables yields:
Ra = \( \frac{R_bd_b}{d_a} \) = \( \frac{55 lbs. \times 9 ft.}{5 ft.} \) = \( \frac{495 ft⋅lb}{5 ft.} \) = 99 lbs.
The mechanical advantage of a third class lever is always:
greater than one |
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equal to one |
|
not equal to one |
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less 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.
| 704 lbs. | |
| 646 lbs. | |
| 640 lbs. | |
| 643 lbs. |
The mechanical advantage (MA) of a block and tackle pulley is equal to the number of times the effort force changes direction. An easy way to count how many times the effort force changes direction is to count the number of ropes that support the resistance which, in this problem, is 8. With a MA of 8, a 80 lbs. effort force could lift 80 lbs. x 8 = 640 lbs. resistance.