alexas said:
I'm a little confused on how to proceed. I get what your talking about with the object not accelerating in the y-direction, but i don't understand why we need to factor it in still? I mean i know we're pulling it at an angle so there is a Y component in the Force. I guess I'm just a little confused on how to proceed can you please clarify things?
Thats my fault most likely, I am trying to think of a way to explain this so you can be on the same page with me... let me see..
So you are pulling your friend on the sled, the reason you want to know the forces in the y-direction is because all of those y forces effect friction.
(And in this case, that is ALL they affect, everything you are doing in the y-direction is to make sure you have your friction right) Normal force pushes up from the earth, counteracting the weight, so
IF there was no rope n would just equal mg.
So, in a simple case. n=mg. But in
your case [forget the x-component for now] the rope
is pulling your sled up, complicating things by lifting up on the sled.
So the friction is going to be different, you are pulling up on the sled so
at that moment it does not weigh "mg", it weighs
"mg=n+Fsin(Θ)"
This equation means that the weight of the object equals 1)The force that the Earth is pressing back against your sled
PLUS(literally "+" sign) 2)the force that you are pulling vertically on the rope. This makes logical sense, therefore if you stopped pulling up, mg would simply equal n. And we know this.
But we are not looking for "mg", we want "n". Which I have already given you, but I would like you to understand it

as I am sure you do as well.
You need n because of the equation..
f
k=μ
kn
But wait... you are puzzle. By substituting in the y-value we found for "n", that would just give you..
f
k=μ
k(mg - Fsin(Θ))
Wait a minute, that doesn't help! If I solve μ
k in that it just gives me a stupid equation with f
k and I don't know that! Bah!
But then you remember that you have not yet added up the forces in the x-direction...
ΣF
x
Oh yea.. what would those be? Is friction the ONLY force acting on the sled in the x-direction? If so then perhaps we can truly not solve this problem, if not, then perhaps there is a force acting in the opposite direction which would
have to be equal to maintain constant velocity... perhaps... let me know what
you think.