Determine static coefficient of friction

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a homework problem regarding the static coefficient of friction between blocks on an inclined surface. Participants identify that the problem statement is poorly worded, leading to confusion about the coefficients of friction being referenced. It is clarified that the calculations should consider the friction between the blocks and the ramp, rather than between the blocks themselves. Ultimately, the consensus is that the problem lacks sufficient information to determine the correct coefficients of friction, rendering it nonsensical. The discussion concludes with an acknowledgment that the question is fundamentally flawed.
werson tan
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Homework Statement


why the µ for block is 0.3(between B and A) ? why can't be µ= 0.4( between B and C) ??

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution

 

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The problem statement is worded incorrectly. It apparently means to consider friction between blocks and the inclined surface, not between blocks. Move on to the next problem, and study the formulas for static and kinetic friction, and when each applies.
 
PhanthomJay said:
The problem statement is worded incorrectly. It apparently means to consider friction between blocks and the inclined surface, not between blocks. Move on to the next problem, and study the formulas for static and kinetic friction, and when each applies.
Can you explain further ??
 
werson tan said:
Can you explain further ??
The first difficulty is that there is no actual question. It describes a set-up, but doesn't say what is to be determined.

Following the calculation, we see that the first step shows that block C is not about to slide down, nor does it require any support from block B. So the conclusion is that there is no force between those two blocks. However, the calculation makes use of a coefficient of static friction between block C and the ramp, whereas the description gave this as the coefficient between blocks B and C.

Next, we perform the same calculation for block B. This time we find that it will slide, if not held in place by block A. Again, it uses the stated coefficients between A and B as though they are between B and the ramp.

The calculation for block A completely ignores the force that would be exerted by block B, so disagrees with the diagram. Again, it uses the stated coefficients between A and B as though they are between A and the ramp.

In short, the question and solution are nonsense from start to finish.
 
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haruspex said:
The first difficulty is that there is no actual question. It describes a set-up, but doesn't say what is to be determined.

Following the calculation, we see that the first step shows that block C is not about to slide down, nor does it require any support from block B. So the conclusion is that there is no force between those two blocks. However, the calculation makes use of a coefficient of static friction between block C and the ramp, whereas the description gave this as the coefficient between blocks B and C.

Next, we perform the same calculation for block B. This time we find that it will slide, if not held in place by block A. Again, it uses the stated coefficients between A and B as though they are between B and the ramp.

The calculation for block A completely ignores the force that would be exerted by block B, so disagrees with the diagram. Again, it uses the stated coefficients between A and B as though they are between A and the ramp.

In short, the question and solution are nonsense from start to finish.
well , i still don't understand why 0.3 is used for B , why not 0.4 is used for block B ?
 
werson tan said:
well , i still don't understand why 0.3 is used for B , why not 0.4 is used for block B ?
if you take the question statement as correct, there is no reason for using either. There simply is no information on the coefficients of friction between the blocks and the ramp.
If you accept that the question statement is garbled, the only way we can deduce what it should have said is by looking at the solution; what it actually said becomes irrelevant.
 
haruspex said:
if you take the question statement as correct, there is no reason for using either. There simply is no information on the coefficients of friction between the blocks and the ramp.
If you accept that the question statement is garbled, the only way we can deduce what it should have said is by looking at the solution; what it actually said becomes irrelevant.
Ok, I know my mistakes already. Thank you for your help.
 
PhanthomJay said:
The problem statement is worded incorrectly. It apparently means to consider friction between blocks and the inclined surface, not between blocks. Move on to the next problem, and study the formulas for static and kinetic friction, and when each applies.
why the µ for block is 0.3(between B and A) ? why can't be µ= 0.4( between B and C) ??
can you explain on that ?
 
Stop trying to make sense out of a problem that makes no sense, and move on.
 
  • #10
PhanthomJay said:
Stop trying to make sense out of a problem that makes no sense, and move on.
i still didnt get you . can you explain further ?
 
  • #11
werson tan said:
i still didnt get you . can you explain further ?
I see no way to make it any clearer than in my post #6.
 
  • #12
haruspex said:
I see no way to make it any clearer than in my post #6.
tat means there is something wrong with the question ?
 
  • #13
werson tan said:
tat means there is something wrong with the question ?
Yes!
 
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