How Far Will M1 Travel in 0.809 Seconds in a Pulley System?

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In the discussion about the pulley system with two blocks, M1 is four times more massive than M2, and the problem involves calculating how far M1 will travel in 0.809 seconds. The user struggled with the forces acting on the masses, particularly the tension and weight, and initially misapplied the direction of forces in their calculations. After several attempts and receiving feedback about the net force acting on both masses, they realized the importance of consistent directional assumptions for their equations. Ultimately, they corrected their approach by aligning the positive direction of their force sums, leading to the successful calculation of the distance traveled by M1. The conversation highlights the significance of understanding force dynamics in pulley systems.
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Homework Statement


http://nplq1.phyast.pitt.edu/res/msu/physicslib/msuphysicslib/09_Force_and_Motion/graphics/prob69_2blkplly.gif

Two blocks are arranged as shown. The pulley can be considered to be massless, and friction is negligible. M1 is four times more massive than M2.

If the system is released from rest, how far will M1 travel in 0.809 s?


Homework Equations



F=ma



The Attempt at a Solution



Okay, basically I've tried multiple times to try and solve this and I keep getting it wrong...I'm not quite sure what else to try. I think I'm looking at the forces wrong somehow. When I input a wrong answer, I get the message "One force acts on the hanging mass, but the net force acts on both masses. Once you have the acceleration, you can calculate the distance." Wouldn't there be two forces, weight and tension?

My free body diagram for the mass on the table is its weight, its normal force, and its tension. It is four times more massive than the hanging mass, so T=4mg. For the hanging mass, I have only weight and tension. T-mg=ma. I tried solving for T in the second sum and plugging it into the first to find a, but I keep getting it wrong. I tried assuming that the mass of the hanging mass is added to the tension in the first, and that didn't work. Again, I assumed that M2=M and M1=4M. I assumed that the acceleration has to be the same for both blocks. To get the distance at the end, that would obviouslt be x=0.5st^2

ANY pointer or help would be greatly appreciated, thanks!
 
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If the pulley is massless and frictionless, then the tension will be the same in both cases. Does that help?
 
Yes, I realize that the ension will be equal in both cases...that's what I was trying to account for but I'm not quite sure how to account for it. Like I said, I solved for T in the hanging mass and used that in for T in the first mass...wouldn't that be assuming they are equal?
 
What answers have you plugged in so far?
 
Numerically? 1.07 m, 0.802 m, and 2.14 m.
 
Ah! I just got it right. I was using the wrong directiond for my sums. For the x sum on M1, I assumed right to be positive and for the y sum on Mw I assumed up to be positive. This doesn't work because I need to assume that the pulley only changes the direction, and therefore the downward direction would have to be positive for the second sum.

Thanks for the assistance! =)
 
No problem ;) Congrats on getting it!
 

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