InertialRef said:
So would it just be F = (13.2 x -1.6)? That answer is right.
That is what we are saying.
As a matter of policy I do not normally confirm answers.
You are supposed to realize the correctness of the answer because you understood the physics.
In this case, if a mass m is accelerating at rate a, then it is, by definition, experiencing a net unbalanced force F given by F=ma.
Unfortunately, we weren't. I think if we had done something tension related, as another classmate of mine pointed out, this question would have been easier to solve. I think either my instructors were expecting us to be aware of this already, or simply skipped over it thinking it would be obvious even if we hadn't done something like that before.
Well, if your class has never encountered free body diagrams, that would explain why the problem is so simple. They would not anticipate that you'd go ask the question in a forum like this one where people know about these diagrams and would expect to use them. All they expected you to do is figure out that you didn't need most of the information supplied.
It's one of the problems with knowing a lot ;) When you have a machine-gun and a water-pistol there is a tendency to reach for the machine-gun when the pistol is all you need.
I suspect that the free-body method will be covered soon, then, since it hasn't already.
I'm still learning with physics is when to know if all the information is required, and when some can be disregarded.
It comes with practice ... now you know to watch for it. The main thing is to concentrate on the physics and not the equations.
When I do something like this I sit back and clear my mind and think: what would I need to know if I was doing this from scratch? Then I look through the data for that information - or clues to how I could work it out.