Crate sliding on a flatbed truck

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around a physics problem involving a crate of oranges on a flatbed truck, focusing on forces of friction and acceleration. The crate's weight, coefficients of friction, and the truck's motion are central to the problem.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the application of Newton's second law and the concept of friction. Questions are raised about the use of equations for different parts of the problem, the necessity of free body diagrams, and the relationship between net force and acceleration.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided guidance through questions aimed at helping the original poster clarify their understanding and approach. There is an ongoing exchange about the correctness of the original poster's calculations and interpretations based on the guidance received.

Contextual Notes

The original poster has not provided initial attempts or reasoning for their calculations, which has led to requests for clarification and further exploration of the problem setup.

lilkrazyrae
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A crate of oranges weighing 180N rests on a flatbet truck 2.0m from the back of the truck. The coefficients of friction between the crate and the bed are us=0.30 and uk=0.20. The truck drives on a straight, level highway at a constant 8.0 m/s. (a) What is the force of friction acting on the crate?
(b) If the truck speeds up with an acceleration of 1.0 m/s^2, what is the force of friction on the crate?
(C) What is the maximum acceleration the truck can have without the crate starting to slide?

Please help asap!
 
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F=MA

[itex]\sum[/itex] F = [itex]\vec F_{fric} + \vec F_{car} [/tex][/itex]
 
I still don't understand You can't use that equation for all three answers can you?
 
Actually, he shouldn't be telling you much of anything, since you haven't shown how you started the problem and where you got stuck. :-p

Rather than tell you how to do it, I am going to ask you some questions to get you going in the right direction.

lilkrazyrae said:
(a) What is the force of friction acting on the crate?

Have you drawn a free body diagram of the crate?
What is the crate's acceleration?
What must the net force be equal to?

(b) If the truck speeds up with an acceleration of 1.0 m/s^2, what is the force of friction on the crate?

Again: Have you drawn a free body diagram?
Given the acceleration, what must the net force be equal to?
What is the maximum static frictional force?
Is that frictional force exceeded here?

(C) What is the maximum acceleration the truck can have without the crate starting to slide?

If you can get (b) then you should be able to get this.

Give it a shot and let us know what you come up with.
 
Alright I used your questions and I got answers for all the parts but now the question is did I use your suggestions correctly. So could you tell me if I did this stuff right. On (a) I got the acceleration to be zero therefore the net force is zero. (b) F static friction equals 54N. (c) I get 54N = 180/9.8 *a which equals 2.94 m/s^2 for the max acceleration Let me know how I did please!
 

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