Need Help Creating a Free Body Diagram of a Car on a Slope

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on creating a free body diagram for a car on a slope at 30 degrees and determining the summation of forces in both the X and Y directions. The user presents their equations but receives feedback indicating that their Y-direction equation is incorrect, as it improperly includes the normal force component. However, the equation for the X direction is confirmed as correct. Additional resources are provided for further clarification on the topic. Accurate representation of forces is crucial for understanding the dynamics of the car on the slope.
mjgarrin
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Hello. I have attached an image of a free body diagram of a car traveling up a ramp at 30 degrees. I was wondering if anyone can help me determine the sumation of forces in the X and Y direction.

I understand that the forces in the Y-direction must be equal to zero or else the car will not stay on the ground. This is the formula I have come up with for this problem:

u = coeff. of friction

FN = mg / cos30

Fu = u x FN

F = force the car is moving under its own power

Sum of Forces in Y direction: FN x cos30 - mg = 0

Is this the correct equation for finding the forces in the Y direction?

Sum of Forces in X direction: F - Fu - (mg x sin30) = ma


Is this the correct equation for finding the forces in the X direction?

Any help would be appreciated. Thank you!
 

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    Free Body Diagram.jpg
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welcome to pf!

hello mjgarrin! welcome to pf! :smile:

(have a mu: µ and a theta: θ and a degree: ° :wink:)

first, your free body diagram is wrong, the mgcosθ is not a separate force and should not be there
mjgarrin said:
Sum of Forces in Y direction: FN x cos30 - mg = 0

Is this the correct equation for finding the forces in the Y direction?

no, the FN x cos30° and the mg are not in the Y direction, are they? :redface:
Sum of Forces in X direction: F - Fu - (mg x sin30) = ma

Is this the correct equation for finding the forces in the X direction?

yes :smile:
 
[PLAIN]http://hpwizard.com/images/hill-climbing.GIF

See http://hpwizard.com/car-performance.html" for more info (At the bottom of the page --> Theory»»Longitudinal acceleration»»Accelerating»»Hill climbing)
 
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