Fairground ride, main driver & pin, forces, stress & angular velocity help

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on a physics problem involving a fairground ride, specifically analyzing the stresses on a pin and arm, and calculating forces and angular velocity. Participants clarify the types of stress experienced, identifying tensile stress on the arm and shear stress on the pin. For calculating the maximum force exerted on the pin, the formula for stress is confirmed as stress equals force divided by area. The approach to determine angular velocity involves substituting centrifugal force into the stress formula and rearranging it accordingly. The conversation emphasizes the importance of applying these equations correctly to solve the problem effectively.
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Homework Statement


A fair ground ride comprises of a car, connected to an arm, secured to the main driver by a pin. It rotates about a vertical axis.

when operational:
a) what type of stress is experienced by the pin?, and what type of stress is experienced by the arm?
b) if the max allowable stress in the pin is 15MN/m²; the pin is 25mm diameter, determine the max force F that the car should exert on the pin.
c)if the loaded mass of the car is 200Kg and the radius from the axis of rotation to the centre of mass of the car is 8m determine the angular velocity of the car about the axis of rotation which will give rise to a stress of 12MN/m² in the pin.

I know its a lot to ask but I've really been tearing my hair out over this question as i don't have an example to work from so any help on this would be great .. an example for me to work off would be even better. Thanks

Homework Equations


Centrifugal force ... F=(m)(r)(w²)

The Attempt at a Solution


Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 

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"I know its a lot to ask but I've really been tearing my hair out over this question..."

Are you referring to question c or are you referring to the entire problem?

Hint: There are tensile-compressive stresses and there are shear stresses.
 
the entire question, a b & c .
tensile on the arm & shear on the pin?
 
You must make an attempt before we can help - forum rules.
 
my apologies,

for question b) i believe that to find the force i must use the formula stress=Force/Area and re-arrange it to be Stress X Area = force.

for c) if stress = F/A and using the centrifugal force F=mass x r x angular velocity² do i substitute the centrifual force formula into the stress =f/a formula. then rearrange it all so i can work out the angular velocity which the question is asking for?

so Stress = (m.r.w²)/area of circle
rearranged to: stress x (area of circle)/(mass x radius) =w²
then square root the answer to get angular velocity?

i might be completely wrong but that's what i assume would be the way of getting the right answer
 
"for question b) i believe that to find the force i must use the formula stress=Force/Area and re-arrange it to be Stress X Area = force. "

Correct

"for c) if stress = F/A and using the centrifugal force F=mass x r x angular velocity² do i substitute the centrifual force formula into the stress =f/a formula. then rearrange it all so i can work out the angular velocity which the question is asking for?"

Yes, that's it.
 
that's brilliant! thank you! :)
 
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