How Far Can the Painter Walk Without Tipping the Plank?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Jtappan
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Fulcrum
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
5 replies · 5K views
Jtappan
Messages
95
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



A painter (mass 68 kg) is walking along a trestle, consisting of a uniform plank (mass 21.0 kg, length 6.00 m) balanced on two sawhorses. Each sawhorse is placed 1.40 m from an end of the plank. A paint bucket (mass 7.0 kg, diameter 28 cm) is placed as close as possible to the right-hand edge of the plank while still having the whole bucket in contact with the plank.

fig-075.gif



(a) How close to the right-hand edge of the plank can the painter walk before tipping the plank and spilling the paint?
______ m

(b) How close to the left-hand edge can the same painter walk before causing the plank to tip? (Hint: As the painter walks toward the right-hand edge of the plank and the plank starts to tip clockwise, consider the force acting upward on the plank from the left-hand sawhorse support.)
______ m



Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



I am just completely confused on this problem. I don't even know where to start.
 
on Phys.org
You shouldn't have any problem finding the mg forces downward of the painter, bucket and board and their positions. You have two unknown upward forces exerted by the sawhorses. But these two unknown forces can be computed by balancing the sum of the forces and sum of the torques. When one of the upward forces vanishes, you are on the edge of tipping, because the sawhorses can't pull down.
 
what do i do about the can at the end when it says its diameter is .28 meters? where do i take the R from?
 
ok I did that and it still doesn't give me the correct answer.

for the balancing of torques, do you imput the R as the distance from the rotational axis?
 
To know why the answer isn't correct we'd have to know a lot more about what you did. You can put the presumed rotational axis anywhere you want. If it doesn't rotate around one axis, then it doesn't rotate around any. It's usually convenient to put it at the location of one of the forces. Then you don't have to put that force into the torque equation.