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Forces

Forces. Force causes acceleration Force is measured in Newtons (N) There are several different types of forces that can be applied to bodies and structures. Static Forces. Static forces do not usually cause motion Consider a tall building The weight of the material

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Forces

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  1. Forces • Force causes acceleration • Force is measured in Newtons (N) • There are several different types of forces that can be applied to bodies and structures

  2. Static Forces • Static forces do not usually cause motion • Consider a tall building • The weight of the material it is built from, and the people and furniture inside it are static loads

  3. Static Forces Examples: • Water sitting in a jug with uniform temperature. • A motionless weight hanging from a cable. • A block resting on a desk. • A poster hanging on a wall.

  4. Dynamic Loads • Usually causes a movement • The value of the force can be variable • Again consider a tall building • Variable winds add an extra force or load to the structure • The engineer must allow for this

  5. Dynamic Loads Examples: • Tree swaying in the wind • A bridge moving under the weight of traffic • Someone pushing a swing • Someone kicking a football

  6. Bending Forces • Structures that carry loads across their length are subject to bending forces • Consider a car driving across a bridge

  7. Shear Forces • These are tearing or cutting forces • Scissors are an example of these

  8. Torsion Forces • Torque is a turning force which tries to twist a structure

  9. Compression Forces • Compression forces try to squash a structure • Consider a column • The weight down is balanced by the reaction from the ground • The forces act to try and shorten the column

  10. Forces in Tension • Tensile forces try to stretch a structure • Consider a crane’s lifting cable • The weight tries to stretch or pull the cable apart • Cables in tension can have small diameters compared to members in compression

  11. LEVERS • In its simplest form, a lever is a stick that is free to pivot or move back and forth at a certain point. • Levers are probably the most common simple machine because just about anything that has a handle on it has a lever attached. • The point on which the lever moves is called the fulcrum. • By changing the position of the fulcrum, you can gain extra power with less effort.

  12. LEVERS • How do you move a heavy person? • If you put the fulcrum in the middle, you won't have a chance. But if you slide the fulcrum closer to the heavy person, it will be easier to lift. • Where's the trade-off? • Well, to get this helping hand, your side of the see-saw is much longer (and higher off the ground), so you have to move it a much greater distance to get the lift

  13. LEVERS • Draw the universal system for a lever • Copy the line diagram of a lever

  14. Task 1 • Draw a universal system diagram for a lever • Complete the following diagram, indicating clearly the LOAD, EFFORT and FULCRUM

  15. Lever Systems • The lever shown is in equilibrium (a steady state) • The input force exerts an anticlockwise moment • The output force exerts a clockwise moment • To be in equilibrium both moments must be equal

  16. The Principle of Moments • The sum of the moments must equal zero • CWM = ACWM • Example: Prove that the following system is in equilibrium

  17. Solution • For equilibrium, the CWM = ACWM. • A moment is a force multiplied by a distance • CWM = ACWM • F1¹ d1 = F2  d2 • The load exerts a clockwise moment (tends to make the lever turn clockwise) • Clockwise moment = 200 N  2 m = 400 Nm • The effort exerts a anticlockwise moment. • Anticlockwise moment = 400 N  1 m = 400 Nm • CWM = ACWM • Therefore the lever is in a state of equilibrium.

  18. Practice:

  19. Questions: • For the system shown: • If the handle length is 250mm and the effort to turn it is 15N, what moment would close the tap valve? • What is the benefit of this type of tap? • Suggest a situation where this type of tap would be useful

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