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Work, Power, and Machines

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Work, Power, and Machines. Physical Science Chapter 12. Machines. devices that change the direction of a force or the size of a force that help us to do work machines will multiply your force OR change the direction of your force BUT CANNOT DO BOTH (can’t do work for you). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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WORK, POWER, AND MACHINES Physical Science Chapter 12
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Page 1: Work, Power, and Machines

WORK, POWER, AND MACHINES

Physical ScienceChapter 12

Page 2: Work, Power, and Machines

Machines devices that change the direction of

a force or the size of a force that help us to do work

machines will multiply your force OR change the direction of your force

BUT CANNOT DO BOTH (can’t do work for you)

Page 3: Work, Power, and Machines

2 forces involved in the use of a machine:effort force (input)- force applied

to the machineresistance force (output) force

opposing the effort force often equal to weight of object

work input is ALWAYS > work outputWHY?friction

Page 4: Work, Power, and Machines

simple machine- machine that has only 1 or 2 parts

6 simple machines:

1. lever- bar that pivots, or turns, on a fixed point3 parts:a. effort arm- (input)- end of the bar you push onb. resistance arm (output)- end of bar that pushes on object you want to movec. fulcrum- point at which it pivots

Page 5: Work, Power, and Machines

3 classes of levers:A. first class lever-effort arm on one side,

resistance arm on other, fulcrum in middle

ex: see saw

Page 6: Work, Power, and Machines

B. Second class lever: fulcrum is at one end, EA at the other, RA

in the middle

ex: wheelbarrow

Page 7: Work, Power, and Machines

C. Third class lever fulcrum at one end, RA at the other, and

EA in the middle

ex: tweezers, forearm

Page 8: Work, Power, and Machines
Page 9: Work, Power, and Machines

2. Wheel and Axle consists of a lever connected to

a shaft lever usually shaped like a knob

or wheeleffort arm- radius of wheelresistance arm- radius of axleto be considered W&A, BOTH wheel and axle MUST move

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Page 11: Work, Power, and Machines

3. Pulley consists of a wheel FREE TO SPIN on

its axle lever rotates around a FIXED POINT 2 FXNS:

changes direction of forceprovides mechanical advantage

(multiplies your force)

Page 12: Work, Power, and Machines

2 TYPES:

a. fixed pulley- attached to something that doesn’t moveused to change the direction of forcedoesn’t multiply force at all

Page 13: Work, Power, and Machines

B. movable pulley- attached to an object being movedmultiplies force

Page 14: Work, Power, and Machines

BLOCK & TACKLE- when fixed & movable pulleys are used together

multiplies A LOT of force

used to lift car engines, etc

Page 15: Work, Power, and Machines
Page 16: Work, Power, and Machines

4. Inclined Plane consists of a flat, sloping surface simplest of all machines used to move objects from 1 level to

another

Page 17: Work, Power, and Machines
Page 18: Work, Power, and Machines

5. Wedge used to push objects apart inclined plane that moves multiplies force and brings it to

a single point

Page 19: Work, Power, and Machines
Page 20: Work, Power, and Machines

6. Screw inclined plane wrapped around a

cylinder multiplies force

how much it increases force depends on PITCH

pitch- how far apart the threads are

smaller the pitch, the more force it multiplies

Page 21: Work, Power, and Machines
Page 22: Work, Power, and Machines

Compound Machines 2 or more simple machines put

together to do work

ex: ax, scissors

Page 23: Work, Power, and Machines

Mechanical Advantage # of times a machine multiplies force

MA = resistance forceeffort force

the greater the number, the less work you have to do

all machines have a MA

Page 24: Work, Power, and Machines

MA of pulley is equal to the number of rope segments pulling up the resistance force


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