Spinnor said:
At the risk of being wrong again, R3 could be correct because it has magnitude 3? We are not told which vector has magnitude 3, it could be any of six directions?
But if R3 has magnitude =3, then it must be R1:R2:R3 = 1:2:3 There is no permutation of 2, 4 and 3 which give a ratio of 1:2 :3 as required by the question. I simply took the offered R1 and R2 as being correct, then R3 follows from that to be -6i
Now the 6 possible directions, if one of them is -3i, must be +i, -i, 0.5 i +0.5sqrt(3) j, -0.5 i -0.5sqrt(3) j, 0.5 i -0.5sqrt(3) j and -0.5 i +0.5sqrt(3)j
Possible sequences of direction would be +i , -0.5 i +0.5sqrt(3) j , -0.5 i -0.5sqrt(3) j , +i , etc. or -i, +0.5 i + 0.5sqrt(3) j, +0.5 i -0.5sqrt(3) j , -i , etc.
Wherever you start in a sequence, you then simply take each unit direction vector in turn ad multiply by the magnitudes 1,2 or 3.
So if you want to finish with R3 in the -i direction, you need to choose the second sequence and work back from the -i term:
R3 = -i x3 = -3 i magn= 3
R2= +0.5 i -0.5sqrt(3) j x2 = +i - sqrt(3) j magn= 2
R1= +0.5 i + 0.5sqrt(3) j x1 = +0.5 i + 0.5sqrt(3) j magn= 1
In that case, your R3 would be correct, but both R1 and R2 wrong.
Now, I think, whoever chose i and j made them half the magnitude of the unit force vector - for convenience, to avoid the fractions. So if you double all the above answers, R1 and R2 are correct and R3 becomes -6i. As far as I can see, you just take your pick.
Then the resultant is either -1.5 i - 0.5sqrt(3) j when R1 is +0.5 i + 0.5sqrt(3) j or -3i -sqrt(3) j when R1 is i + sqrt(3) j
The magnitude of the resultant is sqrt(3) x magnitude of R1 either way.
I'm not sure how you calculate the angle between these without sketching a diagram and using trig or by calculating the angle of each wrt the unit vector i, but from the original diagram it is obvious that it must be 30 deg from the reverse of R1. How they can call this 210 deg when it could just as easily be 150 deg, since, as you say, no requirement is made as to following the sides of the triangle cw or acw, I can't see. I generally choose acw for angles with vectors, as this was the convention when I did electronics, but compass bearings use cw and I expect there are many groups of people using either convention.