Frictional forces and the angle for minimum frictional force

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Homework Statement


A person is dragging a packing crate of mass 100 kg across a rough floor where the coefficient of kinetic friction is 0.400. He exerts a force F just sufficient to keep the crate moving at a constant velocity. At what angle above the horizontal should his pulling force F be for it to be minimum?

Homework Equations


Frictional Forces = UkN

The Attempt at a Solution


Frictional Force = Uk(mg)(cosx)

Im stuck.
 
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I like the "I'm stuck" (you wouldn't post if you weren't). But ##F_{fric} = \mu_k mg\cos\theta## doesn't count as an attempt.

What forces play a role and how can you express the constant speed in an equation ?
 
Forces that play a role:
1) Pulling force F
2) Frictional force

Constant speed means that there is no acceleration.
F = ma = m(0) = 0
 
Frictional force is horizontal, pulling is in some theta direction. What else ? (hint: you already wrote mg -- and there's no vertical acceleration either). So we have a few equations. Magnitude of pulling force might depend on theta. If so, there might be a minimum !
 
Forces that play a role:
1) Pulling force F at an angle
2) Horizontal Frictional force
3) Weight of the block

Yes i understand that the magnitude of the puling force depends on theta, however, how do i relate it to the minimum force?
 
Is it the upward force generated by the pull at an angle?