The Mystery of Pulleys: Answers to Your Burning Questions

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The discussion centers on the mechanics of compound pulleys and their advantages in lifting objects. A compound pulley system reduces the force needed to lift a weight, allowing for easier movement, but requires pulling more rope to achieve the lift. Participants express confusion over the effectiveness of different pulley configurations, particularly between options B and C, questioning which setup is more efficient. The importance of Free Body Diagrams (FBDs) in understanding these systems is highlighted, as well as the need for personal effort in problem-solving. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the principles of mechanical advantage and the trade-offs involved in using compound pulleys.
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Homework Statement
please can someone provide the answer to this question? see image attached I keep thinking B and C offer the same but i'm not sure?
Relevant Equations
n/a
Screen Shot 2019-07-30 at 20.31.11.png
 
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Welcome to the PF. :smile:

No, we cannot give you the answer and reasoning. That is for you to do. We can only offer tutorial help after you show your best efforts to work the problem.

So what have you learned about compound pulleys so far? Why does a compound pulley make it "easier" to lift an object? What is the tradeoff in using a compound pulley -- what do you have to do more of in order to make the lifting force less? How can you apply that fact to this problem?

Also, have you learned how to draw Free Body Diagrams (FBDs) yet in class?
 
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my understanding is that the compound pulley makes it easier because the force required to move the weight is half due to the moveable pulley. i can also say that for every 1 metre of rope pulled, the weight will only move up 0.5m due. I'm confused between the diagrams B and C because to me they require the same effort / neither B or C is easier? They both have a fixed and moveable pulley, its only the anchor that is different, so which pulley makes it easier to lift a heavy weight?Thanks.
 
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markyyyyyy said:
i can also say that for every 1 metre of rope pulled, the weight will only move up 0.5m due.
Can you sketch this for each of the 3 examples? What does it look like before and after you've pulled 1m of rope?
 
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markyyyyyy said:
Problem Statement: please can someone provide the answer to this question? see image attached I keep thinking B and C offer the same but I'm not sure?
Relevant Equations: n/a

View attachment 247378
None of the choices provided are correct. [Unless one is very picky about the slant in the middle strand in C or less than appropriately picky about the slant in the left strand in A]
 
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