Question about a 2 mass, multiple pulley problem.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around solving a two-mass, multiple pulley problem, where the original poster consistently calculated an upward acceleration of g/4, while the expected answer is g/5. Key insights reveal that the acceleration of the left mass must be considered in relation to the right mass, which moves twice as far when the left mass moves up. Participants clarify that the tension in the ropes is not simply equal to the weight of the masses due to the system's acceleration. Ultimately, the original poster acknowledges their misunderstanding regarding the relationship between the masses' movements and the forces involved, leading to a better grasp of the problem. The conversation highlights the importance of correctly applying principles of mechanics in pulley systems.
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I was working my way through a series of problems when I came up against one that has me stuck. If anyone here can assist I would certainly appreaciate it. I found a exact copy of the problem online here: http://www.faqs.org/docs/Newtonian/Newtonian_145.htm
Problem #13

I have tried several different methods for solving this and most commonly I come up with a upward acceleration of g. Never anything less then g. Am I missing something obvious?
 
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when I solved it I got g/4. The easy way is to redraw the situation, thing of the weight on the right as pulling on the one on the left, because there is a pulley system in the middle and the rope to the one on the right is going through it entirely, then you need half the force to lift the fulley on the left. You have masses of m, and the force pulling in this case is mg. So, the overall force on the pylley system is 1/2mg since the one on the left is pulling at 1/2mg down, and the one on the left is pulling at 1mg down.
F = 1g - 1/2g
F = 1/2g
m = m + m = 2m
Fnet = ma
1/2mg = 2ma
1/2g = 2a
g/4 = a, therefore the acceleration in this case should be g/4 towards the left, pulling the weight on the left upward at that acceleration. The answer they say is g/5, I don't know where I went wrong or weather they are wrong.
 
Nenad said:
when I solved it I got g/4. ...The answer they say is g/5, I don't know where I went wrong or weather they are wrong.
when I did it I got g/5
the answer they have in the book

let me look at your solution and see what I think then
 
nenad i don't understand your notation so instead of me trying to criticize your solution how about you try to find what is wrong in my solution.



they say leftmass experiences upwards accel of x (and therefore ropeforce on leftmass is upwards (g+x)M)

but because of pulleysystem when leftmass goes up one inch
then rightmass must go down two inches. therefore rightmass experiences
downwards accel of 2x (and therefore ropeforce on rightmass is upwards (g-2x)M)

now we have to equate forces

Two times the tension in the right rope equals the tension in the left rope.

so (g+x)M = 2(g - 2x)M

g+x = 2g - 4x

5x = g

x = g/5
 
ya, the way you did it was right, but I don't do it using that method of tension of ropes. I used acceleration of the system. You find the forse on each block, then you fing the total force on the system by subtractiong the two, and then fond the acceleration. I still don't know where I went wrong.
 
The easiest way to get a solution IMO is the Lagrangian formulation, same as all pulley problems :smile:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_mechanics

Of course they don't teach this formulation till after you have had a bunch of pulley problems, because it makes them too easy :smile: :smile:

Let h be the height of the mass on the left. If we move the left mass up h, the right mass drops twice that distance, it's height lowers by 2*h

Then the total kinetic energy T = .5*m*(hdot^2+4*hdot^2)
(the mass on the right is always moving at twice the velocity of the one on the left, so it has 4 times the kinetic energy)

The total potential energy is V = m*g*h - 2*m*g*h/2 = -m*g*h

So L = T-V = 5/2*m*hdot^2 + m*g*h

<br /> d/dt (\frac{\partial L}{\partial hdot}) = \frac{\partial L}{\partial H}<br />

5*m*hdotdot = m*g

so hdotdot, the acceleration of the mass on the left, is positive (upwards) at g/5.
 
Last edited:
tension does not equal weight

Nenad said:
ya, the way you did it was right, but I don't do it using that method of tension of ropes. I used acceleration of the system. You find the forse on each block, then you fing the total force on the system by subtractiong the two, and then fond the acceleration. I still don't know where I went wrong.
You went wrong by assuming that a mass m pulls down its rope with a force of mg. Not true if it's accelerating.
 
yes, thanks Doc Al, my mistake.
 
Thanks Everyone

Thank you everyone for the assistance, It was definatly the aright=2aleft factor that I was missing, I also ended up having to review more basic Atwood machine problems before I fully grasped it. Thanks again that one was driving me crazy.
 
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