View Full Version : Inclined Plane Forces
Ideologue
May9-06, 03:43 PM
Please could you help me find some equations that can be used to calculate the power needed to accelerate up an inclined plane and also the power needed to travel up an inclined plane at a given speed?
Ignoring rolling resistance, aerodynamic drag, mechanical loss and the force needed to spin wheels, I need to know the force required for a bike to travel up the inclined plane.
Thus far I only have the formula below:
Force = weight X the sin of the angle of the inclined plane
That formula gives the force needed to move an object up the inclined plane, but I do not know how to incorporate the speed of the object or the acceleration of the object into it.
lightgrav
May9-06, 11:49 PM
Which Force is that? [gravity!]
Which Energy is associated with gravity?
How is Power related to Energy?
Ideologue
May10-06, 02:57 PM
It is ultimately the power required to ride a bike up an inclined plane (ignoring friction) that I seek to investigate.
I think the following equations are correct. Please comment on them either way:
Force required to accelerate up an inclined plane:
Force = weight X the sine of the angle X acceleration in meters squared
Force required to travel up an inclined plane at a given speed:
Force = weight X the sine of the angle X velocity
Are these accurate?
Hootenanny
May10-06, 03:01 PM
Force = weight X the sine of the angle X acceleration in meters squared
This one is close.
Force required to travel up an inclined plane at a given speed:
Force = weight X the sine of the angle X velocity
Not so close. Go back to basics. What is Newton's first and second laws? A diagram of the forces acting would be useful in this case.
~H
Ideologue
May11-06, 07:27 PM
Thanks for your reply.
With ‘this is close’ I guess you mean completely wrong!
For acceleration up the inclined plane is this right:
F = mg sin(angle)
And for a constant speed up the slope:
F = mg sin(angle) + ma
?
P = Work/Time = Force*Distance/Time = Force*Velocity
Force required = mgsin(angle)
I think you can go from here.
Arun
Hootenanny
May12-06, 02:59 AM
Thanks for your reply.
With ‘this is close’ I guess you mean completely wrong!
For acceleration up the inclined plane is this right:
F = mg sin(angle)
And for a constant speed up the slope:
F = mg sin(angle) + ma
?
These two are the wrong way round! For constant speed, the driving force (up the plane) must equal the component of gravity pulling down the plane. Therefore For constant speed: F = mg\sin\theta.
To accelerate up the plane, you must first have a force equal to the component of gravity (or else you would accelerate down the plane!), then you must add the additional force required to accelerate up the plane at a m.s-2. Therefore To accelerate up the plane at a m.s-2: F = mg\sin\theta + ma.
Do you follow?
~H
Ideologue
May12-06, 08:06 AM
Thank you both for taking the time to post,
OK, I think I understand this now. So if I want to know how much force is required to accelerate a bike up a hill (ignoring friction and drag) from 0 to 10 miles per hour within two seconds then I should use the following equation:
f = mgsinθ + ma
If the inclined plane is at an angle of 20 degrees, the bike weighs 50kg and g = 9.81m/s squared and 10 miles per hour is the same as 4.4704 metres per second (and 0 to 4.4704 metres per second means that acceleration (a) = 2.2352 metres per second squared) then the following is correct:
F = 50 X 9.81 X 0.342020143 (being the sine of the angle) + (50 X 2.2352)
Answer = 279.520881 newtons.
?
Hootenanny
May12-06, 01:30 PM
If the inclined plane is at an angle of 20 degrees, the bike weighs 50kg and g = 9.81m/s squared and 10 miles per hour is the same as 4.4704 metres per second (and 0 to 4.4704 metres per second means that acceleration (a) = 2.2352 metres per second squared) then the following is correct:
F = 50 X 9.81 X 0.342020143 (being the sine of the angle) + (50 X 2.2352)
Answer = 279.520881 newtons.
Yes, your correct. As long as your bike doesn't have a rider :rolleyes:
~H
Ideologue
May12-06, 01:39 PM
Yes, your correct. As long as your bike doesn't have a rider :rolleyes:
~H
lol, I did forget about the rider!
Many thanks for your help, I appreciate it.
Hootenanny
May12-06, 01:44 PM
lol, I did forget about the rider!
Many thanks for your help, I appreciate it.
No problem! Mind you, 50kg is a heavy bike, I wouldn't like to ride it! Mines nice and light at about 10 kg :approve: and that's quite heavy for a bike!
~H
G10slayer
Jan19-10, 02:28 PM
I have been working on this same equation except I derived the equation F = weight*sine squared.
G10slayer
Jan19-10, 02:34 PM
(THIS IS FOR ABOVE)
friction is absent and speed is constant
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