THANKS,FOR THE HINT,ASRTRONUC BUT TO FIND THE MOMENT ABOUT A PIVOT THERE HAS TO BE A DISTANCE GIVEN FROM THE PIVOT TO THE POINT OF APPLICATION OF FORCES BUT THERE IS NO SUCH THINGS GIVEN THERE? A SOLVED THE FIGURE1 BY ASSUMING THE ANGLES FROM THE TRIANGLES AS THERE ARE EQUILATERAL triangles BUT DON'T FIND ANY USEFUL APPLICATION OF THE TRUSS HEIGTH GIVEN IN THE SKETCH. ANY IDEA OF HOW TO PROCEED WITH THE PROBLEM FIGURE 2? wHEN I SOLVED THE 2ND PROBLEM I GOT SOME ANSWERS FOR FEW MEMBERS AND THE REST ARE LOTS OF EQUATION WHICH I COULD NOT RELATE Anyhow TO EACH OTHER TO FIND THE FORCES REMAINING.Astronuc said:For the problem in the second figure, in addition to the sum of the reaction forces, one must also look at the sum of the moments.
Pick one of the reaction points as a pivot and look at the sum of the moments about that pivot.
In reality, members are seldom truly connected by pins; often there are several bolts on each member at the joints, or gusset plates, or welds, that tend to make the connections more rigid than pinned. However, tests and computer modeling show that the error is generally very small when assuming the members are connected by pins. Whenever you see a truss problem, you can assume pinned connections at the menmber joints, if not otherwise stated. BTW, I found a formula for determining determinancy: if m= 2j-3, the truss is determinant. In your case, m=19 and j =11, so the truss is determinate. That doesn't work all the time, though, especially if there are zero force members.Sharifullah said:thanks phanthomjay, u mean if i could solve the whole unknowns within the structure using statics equation(Sum Fx=0 Fy=0 moment=0) then the structure is statically determinant otherwise indeterminant. In this case, as there is no indication whether the truss is pinned member joints can't it be rigid?The supports are sliding as the reaction is single so it is an indication or at least i could justify my assumption in the assignment.