Tractor and pulleys - expression of speed

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on deriving the vertical speed of a bale (VB) being lifted by a tractor (VA) using a pulley system. The key insight is that the problem is kinematical rather than dynamic, emphasizing the geometric relationship between the lengths of the rope and the speeds. The relationship is established as VB = (1/2)(VA)(x/l), indicating that the vertical speed of the bale is half the tractor's speed multiplied by the ratio of the distance from the tractor to the pulley (x) over the total rope length (l). The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the geometry of the system rather than the forces involved. This approach simplifies the problem and leads to a clear expression for the bale's vertical speed.
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Homework Statement



A tractor named A is used to lift a bale B with a system of pulleys.
The tractor has an unknown speed called VA : find the expression of the bale's vertical speed VB in function of x (distance from the tractor to the pulley).
The diameter of both pulleys can be neglected.

Homework Equations



I call T the tension in the rope, N the reaction of the ground and W=mg the weight, mA the tractor's mass and mB the bale's mass, aA the tractor's acceleration and aB the bale's acceleration.

In A, I have : horizontally -T*(x/l) = mA * aA
vertically :N - mA*g + N*(h/l) = 0
In B : T - mB*g = mB*aB

The Attempt at a Solution



I've tried to put the problem into some equations, but I don't see how I can switch from accelerations to speed...moreover, I don't have any numeric data, so any piece of information is welcome!

Thanks in advance!
 

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This is more of a trig problem than a physics problem. No need to consider forces. Hint: The rope doesn't stretch. Hint 2: How does VB depend on the rate that "l" increases?
 
Hint: there's no dynamics involved in this problem: it is entirely kinematical. This means that we don't care about forces and so on: it is just "geometry": for a given position of the tractor, and a given length of the rope, the bale will be at a certain height.

Second hint: call the total rope length "L" and consider the 3 pieces of rope (going from the pulley to the bale, going from the bale up to the pulley again, and finally going from the pulley to the tractor) that make up the entire rope (and hence, whose sum must be equal to L).

EDIT: I see that Doc Al was typing the same thing while I was doing so...
 
If I remember correctly, having this type of setup gives a force advantage to the tractor. Pulling rope (l) a distance of 10m will raise bail B by 5m. The force on (l) is equal to the force on each of ropes in the loop that make up (h-y), so an applied force of 10N on (l) will give a force of 20N on the bale.

First step is thinking what the equation would be with no angles:
Vb = (1/2)Va; where Vb and Va are parallel (the tractor would be going straight up at x=0)
Now realistically, maximum velocity of Vb is when Va is parallel to rope (l), so we'll use cosine (because cosine starts at maximum). Since we're using cosine we also need to use an angle that starts at 0 (where cosine is max). Sticking with this idea of max speed, Va will be parallel to rope (l), which will also be parallel to ground (x). Having a parallel between measurable distances is what we want for our angle of 0, so our cosine is for the angle between rope (l) and ground (x).
Vb = (1/2)(Va)cos(theta), alternatively written as:
Vb = (1/2)(Va)(x/l)
 
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