Forces on a crate with friction: find the normal force

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the normal force acting on a crate subjected to various forces, including gravitational and frictional forces. The context involves analyzing vertical and horizontal forces and understanding their interactions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the calculation of the normal force and the implications of a net vertical force being zero. There are attempts to clarify the directions of the forces involved and the significance of the mass and applied forces.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with each other's reasoning, questioning assumptions about the forces' directions and magnitudes. Some guidance has been offered regarding the relationship between the forces, but there is still uncertainty among some participants about how to proceed with the problem.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of a specific value for the gravitational force and confusion regarding the application of different forces in the calculations. The original poster expresses a lack of understanding about the problem setup and the necessary calculations.

Jujubee37
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Homework Statement
Force P (78.28 N) pulls on a crate of weight W (164 N) on a rough surface at a constant speed. The figure shows the directions of the forces that act on the crate. FN represents the normal force. The kinetic frictional force is f (51.25 N). The angle, a, is 49.1 degrees. Calculate the value of the normal force.
Relevant Equations
mg-Fsin(x)
1613252983020.png
I have attempted this problem by solving for the normal force. (16.73)(9.8)-51.25(sin)(49.1). I tried to work that out but it was incorrect because apparently the vertical force is zero. Could I get an explanation on what that means and where I should start?
 
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I did. (16.73)(9.8)-51.25(sin)(49.1)= 125.21 N
 
Are these even in the same direction ?
 
BvU said:
Are these even in the same direction ?
I wouldn't know. All I know is that the vertical net force is zero and the normal force is one of the vertical forces. I worked this out two ways. one with sin and the other with cos because those are the only equations that I have involving an angle.
 
Jujubee37 said:
I wouldn't know.
Huh ? Isn't mg vertical and 51.25 N horizontal ?

Jujubee37 said:
apparently the vertical force is zero
Says who ?
 
BvU said:
Huh ? Isn't mg vertical and 51.25 N horizontal ?

Says who ?
Lon capa the website. I don't understand this so I can't answer your questions.
 
I can't get in there, so you have to play go-between.

Is it clar to you that ##\ mg\ ##, ##\ \ P\sin a\ \ ## and ## \ N \ ## are the only vertical forces in the story ?
And if ##N## would be zero, then ##\ mg = P\sin a\ \ ## would follow ?

Just to humor me :wink: , calculate the net horizontal force ...

##\ ##
 
BvU said:
I can't get in there, so you have to play go-between.

Is it clar to you that ##\ mg\ ##, ##\ \ P\sin a\ \ ## and ## \ N \ ## are the only vertical forces in the story ?
And if ##N## would be zero, then ##\ mg = P\sin a\ \ ## would follow ?

Just to humor me :wink: , calculate the net horizontal force ...

##\ ##
I still do not understand what I have to do. Solve for the horizontal? or what?
 
  • #10
Why not just do it ?

##N## can't be zero: ##mg## is much bigger than ##P\sin a##.
 
  • #11
BvU said:
Why not just do it ?

##N## can't be zero: ##mg## is much bigger than ##P\sin a##.
Do what? I really do not understand where I am supposed to start. I have no understanding of this problem. This is what the hint was for this problem.

The net vertical force here is zero. The normal force is one of the vertical forces. Others are weight and part of the pulling force.
 
  • #12
Aha ! It says the NET vertical force is zero. There is no acceleration in the vertical direction. So you have ##mg## down, ##P\sin a## and ##N## both up. And the sum is zero.

The only difference with your working is that you used 51.25 instead of 78.28 N for ##P##.
 
  • #13
Jujubee37 said:
I did. (16.73)(9.8)-51.25(sin)(49.1)= 125.21 N
Where that 16.73 comes from?
 
  • #14
I guess it's a calculated ##m##
 
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  • #15
Thank you, BvU; exactly.
Perhaps not being at scale, the posted diagram is confusing the OP.
 
  • #16
However, I suspect @Jujubee37 is still confused ?
 
  • #17
Jujubee37 said:
... I really do not understand where I am supposed to start. I have no understanding of this problem.

Not being pulled in any direction, the block pushes the ground down with force W of magnitude 164 N and there is no kinetic frictional force f to talk about.
Do you understand that?
 
  • #18
i got the answer already. 16.73 is the mass. I had to solve for it
 
  • #19
Jujubee37 said:
i got the answer already. 16.73 is the mass. I had to solve for it
May I ask what answer you got?
Do you now understand the purpose of this problem?
 
  • #20
@Jujubee37: You do not need to find the mass. Simply replace 'mg' by '164' (Newtons).

Have you solved the problem now, or do you still want help?
 
  • #21
Jujubee37 said:
Homework Statement:: Force P (78.28 N) ... The kinetic frictional force is f (51.25 N).

View attachment 277913
. (16.73)(9.8)-51.25(sin)(49.1).
Looks to me that you got confused between P and f when plugging numbers into your equation.
 
  • #22
Lnewqban said:
May I ask what answer you got?
Do you now understand the purpose of this problem?
The answer I got was 104.79 N. I have practiced more problems similar to this one so I understand it now.
 
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  • #23
Steve4Physics said:
@Jujubee37: You do not need to find the mass. Simply replace 'mg' by '164' (Newtons).

Have you solved the problem now, or do you still want help?
Yes I am aware now, my way got me the correct answer but yes plugging in 164 would be quicker.
 

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