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Chapter 4 The Inclined Plane and The Wedge
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Basic Machines - Intro to machines and motion theories
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Applications Afloat and Ashore

CHAPTER 4 THE INCLINED PLANE AND THE WEDGE CHAPTER LEARNING OBJECTIVES Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able  to do  the  following: l Summarize the advantage of the barrel roll and the wedge. You have probably watched a driver load barrels on a truck. He backs the truck up to the curb. The driver then places a long double plank or ramp from the  sidewalk  to  the  tailgate,  and  then  rolls  the  barrel up the ramp. A 32-gallon barrel may weigh close to 300 pounds when full, and it would be a job to lift one up into the truck. Actually, the driver is using a simple machine  called  the  inclined  plane.  You  have  seen  the inclined  plane  used  in  many  situations.  Cattle  ramps, a mountain highway and the gangplank are familiar examples. The  inclined  plane  permits  you  to  overcome  a large resistance, by applying a small force through a longer distance when raising the load. Look at figure 4-1.  Here  you  see  the  driver  easing  the  300-pound barrel  up  to  the  bed  of  the  truck,  3  feet  above  the sidewalk. He is using a plank 9 feet long. If he didn’t use  the  ramp  at  all,  he’d  have  to  apply  300-pound force straight up through the 3-foot distance. With the ramp, he can apply his effort over the entire 9 feet of the plank as he rolls the barrel to a height of 3 feet. It looks as if he could use a force only three-ninths of 300, or 100 pounds, to do the job. And that is actually the  situation. Here’s the formula. Remember it from chapter 1? L R —=— IE In which L    = length  of  the  ramp,  measured  along  the slope, 1  =  height  of  the  ramp, R   = weight of the object to be raised, or lowered, E   = force required to raise or lower the object. Now apply the formula this problem: In this case, L =  9ft, 1 = 3 ft, and R = 300 lb. By substituting these values in the formula, you get 9E =  900 E = 100 pounds. Since the ramp is three times as long as its height, the  mechanical  advantage  is  three.  You  find  the theoretical mechanical advantage by dividing the total distance of the effort you exert by the vertical distance the load is raised or lowered. THE WEDGE The  wedge  is  a  special  application  of  the  inclined plane. You have probably used wedges. Abe Lincoln used a wedge to help him split logs into rails for fences. The blades of knives, axes, hatchets, and chisels act as wedges  when  they  are  forced  into  apiece  of  wood.  The wedge  is  two  inclined  planes  set  base-to-base.  By Figure 4-1.—An inclined plane. 4-1

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