Anyone want to take a look at this?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a problem involving a nonuniform bar suspended by two massless cords at specific angles. Participants are attempting to compute the distance from the left-hand end of the bar to its center of mass, given the weight of the bar and its length.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are plugging in values into equations to find the center of mass but are arriving at different results than expected. There is a focus on verifying the correctness of the equations and the provided answer.

Discussion Status

Multiple participants are questioning the accuracy of the provided answer and the equations used. There is a consensus that the algebra appears correct, but uncertainty remains regarding the final answer. Some participants express hope that the discrepancy is due to a miscalculation in the source material.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the assumption that the equations provided in the reference material are accurate, yet they are encountering conflicting results. There is an emphasis on the possibility of errors in the source rather than in their calculations.

bullroar_86
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I have a similar question to this, and I'm trying to figure out how it works. I think the answer here might be wrong.

It won't copy/paste right so here's the link

http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~gan/teaching/spring99/C13.pdf

A nonuniform bar of weight W is suspended
at rest in a horizontal position by two massless
cords. One cord makes the angle q = 36.9° with
the vertical; the other makes the angle f = 53.1°
with the vertical. If the length L of the bar is 6.10
m, compute the distance x from the left-hand end
of the bar to its center of mass.


When i plug in the values, I'm getting 2.19

the answer there is 2.93
 
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Right, go ahead.
 
was that a sarcastic right? or a "it's right" right?

=P


The algebra seems to make sense, but I'm just not getting the same answer as them
 
I'm getting 2.19 as well by plugging in the numbers to the last equation given in the explanation. It's definitely possible that either the equation is written incorrectly or perhaps the answer given is simply wrong.
 
Eturnalblonde said:
I'm getting 2.19 as well by plugging in the numbers to the last equation given in the explanation. It's definitely possible that either the equation is written incorrectly or perhaps the answer given is simply wrong.


Yeah I am hoping the final answer was just a miscalculation on their part.

I've gone through the anwer step by step, and all the algebra looks good to me.
 
I generally supplement sarcasm with smileys. If it is a plain sentence then there is no sarcasm. Their equations are correct but your answer is right. (no smileys as you may find)
 

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