How do you perform the 4 person chair trick?

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The discussion focuses on a balancing trick involving four people transferring their weight to one another while seated. Participants emphasize that the key to success lies in shifting the upper body's weight from the chair to the legs of the person next to them. This requires a stable configuration, initially supported by chairs, to achieve balance. The conversation delves into the physics behind the trick, particularly the concepts of center of gravity and moments. Each person's weight is supported by their own legs and the legs of the person they lean against, with the center of gravity playing a crucial role in maintaining balance. Participants note that while the trick may seem challenging, it is manageable with practice, as demonstrated in a classroom setting.
rvgene
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Ok, so the trick is shown in the following link...



could anyone explain how this is accomplished?
 
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Just get 4 friends and try it??
 
As far as I can tell they are just transferring the weight of their upper body from the chair to the legs of the guy next to them. The only reason you need the chairs is because there is no way to get in that load balanced configuration initially without some support.
 
Ive done this with friends before. It's not easy but not too hard either. All you're doing is transferring your weight to the next person's legs. So long as they hold them straight and you stay still you balance.
 
hmm, does it have to do with concepts such as centre of gravity and moments?

for example, the pivot is at the head, and there is a anticlockwise moment due to the centre of gravity and a clockwise moment due to the normal force at the feet?
 
rvgene said:
hmm, does it have to do with concepts such as centre of gravity and moments?

for example, the pivot is at the head, and there is a anticlockwise moment due to the centre of gravity and a clockwise moment due to the normal force at the feet?
Consider each person individually as an object resting on two supports. The weight of each person is supported by 1.) their own legs from the knees down, and 2.) the legs, from the knees down, of the person on whose knees their back is resting. The center of gravity of each person is somewhere between their knees and the point where their back touches the next persons knees, though it is much closer to the latter. I just experimented with getting myself into this position with my back resting on the seat of a chair. If you try that you'll see there's much more pressure on your back than on your feet. In the group situation each person's knees are supporting a little bit of their own weight and most of another person's weight. If you could determine the center of gravity of each person in this position you could work out how much of their weight is supported by their own knees and how much by the knees of the next person.
 
Okay, that was amusing.
 
our teacher made me and 3 others do this demonstration in class back in high school. It really isn't as hard as it looks.
 

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