Help determining force vectors?

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    Force Vectors
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the force vectors acting on a guitar bridge due to the tension in the strings. Participants explore the principles of vector mechanics and the factors influencing the forces, including tension, angles, and friction, while seeking resources for further understanding.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes that the tension in the guitar string is uniform along its length, assuming no friction at the bridge, and suggests that the problem can be approached as a vector problem.
  • Another participant expresses uncertainty about determining vectors and seeks guidance on the necessary concepts and calculations to understand the forces involved.
  • It is mentioned that tension can be influenced by factors such as string diameter, material type, and frequency, and that tension tables provided by manufacturers can be useful.
  • A participant introduces the concept of the 'break angle' and notes its significance in calculating the downward force on the bridge, indicating that this angle can vary from zero to ninety degrees.
  • Some participants recommend introductory physics textbooks as resources for learning about vector mechanics and related principles.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the uniformity of tension along the string and the relevance of vector mechanics. However, there are differing views on the impact of friction and the specifics of the break angle, indicating some contention in the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention the potential influence of friction at the bridge and the need for further exploration of the break angle, but these aspects remain unresolved within the discussion.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for musicians interested in the engineering aspects of guitar strings, as well as students or hobbyists looking to understand the application of vector mechanics in real-world scenarios.

Guitar-Roy
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I'm tossing around an idea in my head, but I'm outside of my knowledge base.

A guitar string is suspended between two points (nut and a bridge) and tightened to a certain tension. I assume most of the stress is in line with the strings, but force can do funny, counterintuitive things.

I want to find how much downward pressure, perpendicular to the strings, is acting on the bridge. Or how much upward pressure the bridge is exerting against the strings. Or whatever.

I don't have test equipment, I'm hoping for some math and principles so I can figure out a realistic range of real world possibilities.

What variables and formulas do I need?

Website/book recommendations are awesome. I can RTFM. I just don't know where to begin.
 
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The tension will be the same along the entire string, assuming that there is zero friction at the bridge. Friction at the bridge might cause a difference in the tension on the two sides. The rest is a simple vector problem. You need to measure, or estimate, the angles made by the string on the two sides of the bridge with the bridge direction.
 
MarcusAgrippa said:
The tension will be the same along the entire string...The rest is a simple vector problem...

I appreciate the response, but I don't know much about determining vectors (outside of some specific applications I've worked on before). That's my problem.

Tension equality makes sense, which I imagine can be determined by some math on string diameter, material type, frequency it is tuned to, etc.

What do I need to learn to figure out the magnitude and direction of the forces within this context?
 
Elementary vector mechanics. Try a book like Serway, Physics for scientists and engineers, or any freshman Physics text.
 
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MarcusAgrippa said:
Try a book like Serway, Physics for scientists and engineers, or any freshman Physics text.

Thank you very much. That's what I'm looking for. I'll go to a library.

I didn't know where to begin.
 
Guitar-Roy said:
I appreciate the response, but I don't know much about determining vectors (outside of some specific applications I've worked on before). That's my problem.

Tension equality makes sense, which I imagine can be determined by some math on string diameter, material type, frequency it is tuned to, etc.

Many string manufacturers provide tension tables for all their strings, they show what tension (often in lbf, pound force) a given string exerts for given pitches and scale lengths. Here Daddario's chart:

http://www.daddario.com/upload/tension_chart_13934.pdf

The angle you are looking for is called the 'break angle' and is the topic of some contention (google 'top wrapping' for an example).
The downward force acting on the bridge varies from zero when the break angle is zero up to the total tension force when the break angle is 90 (ignoring friction).
I would think friction can be ignored as any significant friction at the break points leads to tuning instability and makes the guitar unplayable (in the sense that no one wants to play a guitar that doesn't stay in tune).

Some further reading:
http://www.frudua.com/guitar_strings_tension.htm
 
billy_joule said:
Many string manufacturers provide tension tables...

Thanks, Billy Joule.

Those tension tables are great.

I'm familiar with break angle as a musician, but not from an engineering perspective.

Between those tables and reading some books like Marcus mentioned, I should be able to figure out what I'm looking for.
 

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