Discovering the Force on a Mass Attached to a Wire for Beginners

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To find the force acting vertically downwards on a 200 g mass attached to a wire, a free body diagram (FBD) is recommended for clarity. The force can be calculated using the formula F = m * g, where m is the mass in kilograms and g is the acceleration due to gravity (approximately 9.81 m/s²). The discussion suggests checking the electrical engineering book for explanations on FBDs or using online resources like Wikipedia for further learning. After understanding the concept, users are encouraged to return with their calculations for feedback. This approach helps beginners grasp fundamental physics concepts effectively.
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Hello I'm new here and I don't know if this is the right place but I just got my "electrical engineering" book in the mail and I started to flip through it. It look really interesting and all so I decided to read some of the examples it had I figured most of them out but got to this question and I just don't get it! I may be a complete idiot when you see the question but I just need some explanations.

the question is: Find the force acting vertically downwards on a mass of 200 g attached to a wire.

so how do you figure this out?
 
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lostmoose2121 said:
Hello I'm new here and I don't know if this is the right place but I just got my "electrical engineering" book in the mail and I started to flip through it. It look really interesting and all so I decided to read some of the examples it had I figured most of them out but got to this question and I just don't get it! I may be a complete idiot when you see the question but I just need some explanations.

the question is: Find the force acting vertically downwards on a mass of 200 g attached to a wire.

so how do you figure this out?

Welcome to the PF. Doesn't sound like a question from an EE book, but whatever. The traditional way to handle this question is by using a free body diagram. Does your book explain that? If not, you can use www.wikipedia.org to learn more about FBDs. Once you do that, come back to this thread and post your work, and we can check it out.
 
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