Recent content by Jintachi
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
The only part which makes sense is where I have to add the x and y components to get the resultant of x and y. Where do I go from after I have the resultants?- Jintachi
- Post #12
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
Pcosθ for x component, and sin for y?- Jintachi
- Post #10
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
Can you see the image?- Jintachi
- Post #8
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
How would you guys start this? I'm sorry to ask this but I'm fairly clueless. I'm pretty sure what I've said to the above post makes no sense- Jintachi
- Post #6
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
Oops. forgot to mention, I got 22.61degrees from the triangle on the 325N vector. I got it by doing: tan-1(5/12) = 22.6198- Jintachi
- Post #3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Solving Mechanics Basics CW Homework: F and Theta
Homework Statement The question in short: If the resultant force acting on the bracket is 750N along the x positive axis, what is the magnitude of F and the direction (theta) The Attempt at a Solution I have tried for several hours now trying to get this done. I have made a table for...- Jintachi
- Thread
- Basics Mechanics
- Replies: 12
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
-
J
Mechanical Engineering and BioMed. Engineering?
I really wanted to do Biomedical engineering but didnt do biology before so had to route into something else. Was well gutted, biomedical engineering would be SO interesting- Jintachi
- Post #2
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering