How to Determine the Angle for Optimal Force Direction in Engineering?

  • Thread starter Thread starter fball558
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Angle Engineering
AI Thread Summary
To determine the optimal angle for connecting member 1 to the plate, the resultant force of F1 and F2 must be directed horizontally. The discussion involves using trigonometric functions, specifically sine and cosine, to break down the forces into their x and y components. The user is currently stuck on calculating the x-component of F1, expressing it as 8 cos(90 - theta) and seeking guidance on how to proceed with the calculations. The conversation emphasizes the need to find all components, including F1y, F2x, and F2y, before calculating the resultant force. Clarification on these steps is essential for solving the engineering problem effectively.
fball558
Messages
143
Reaction score
0
Engineering question about angle??

Homework Statement



Determine the angle (theta) for connecting member 1 to the plate soo that the resultant force of F1 and F2 is directed horizontally to the right. Also, what is the magnitude of the resultant force?
i drew a sketch diagram up in paint to help me but it did not. here is what i made.


Homework Equations


i know you will have to use some trig like cos and sin
also maybe law of cos



The Attempt at a Solution



i did the sketch also i tried braking down the both the F1 and the F2 into x and y components but got stuck on the x and y components for the F1 because i get for
x= 8 cos (90 - theta)
any help would be great.
thanks
 

Attachments

  • me.jpg
    me.jpg
    9.8 KB · Views: 404
Physics news on Phys.org


fball558 said:
i did the sketch also i tried braking down the both the F1 and the F2 into x and y components but got stuck on the x and y components for the F1 because i get for
x= 8 cos (90 - theta)
So far, so good. Keep going. (Note that you can also express that x-component using sinθ.)
 


sin θ = Fr/8 where Fr is the resultant force. but that is 2 unknowns and i don't know what to do from there. i don't have the textbook for this class, the book store ran out or i would just look in there for examples.
 


fball558 said:
sin θ = Fr/8 where Fr is the resultant force.
One step at a time. You haven't gotten to the resultant force yet. You're still finding the x-component of F1: F1x = 8 sinθ. Now find F1y, F2x, and F2y.
 
Thread 'Have I solved this structural engineering equation correctly?'
Hi all, I have a structural engineering book from 1979. I am trying to follow it as best as I can. I have come to a formula that calculates the rotations in radians at the rigid joint that requires an iterative procedure. This equation comes in the form of: $$ x_i = \frac {Q_ih_i + Q_{i+1}h_{i+1}}{4K} + \frac {C}{K}x_{i-1} + \frac {C}{K}x_{i+1} $$ Where: ## Q ## is the horizontal storey shear ## h ## is the storey height ## K = (6G_i + C_i + C_{i+1}) ## ## G = \frac {I_g}{h} ## ## C...
Back
Top