Solving for Car's Acceleration: 40kg, 30° Angle, 0.4 μ

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A 40kg car is being pulled at a 30-degree angle with a force of 230N, and the coefficient of friction is 0.40. The discussion focuses on calculating the car's acceleration by first determining the frictional force and the net force acting on the car. Participants clarify that the normal force must be calculated considering the angle of the applied force, leading to a corrected frictional force of approximately 110.96N. After accounting for all forces, the final calculated acceleration of the car is 2.2 m/s². The importance of correctly identifying forces and their components is emphasized throughout the discussion.
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Homework Statement



a person pulls a 40kg car at a 30 degree angle with 230N. If the coefficient of friction is 0.40, with what acceleration does the car move?

Homework Equations



F =ma
f = mN

The Attempt at a Solution



I draw a FBD
fbd1.jpg


then I found F sin θ which is 115, and F cos θ which is 199.19. Friction came out to be 392N. I don't know what to do next I need a little bit of help. thanks in advance.
 
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Well now that you have the applied force and the force of friction, you need to find the parallel force of gravity. Then you use the add up all your forces, equate it to Fnet. Replace Fnet with m*a, divide Fnet with the mass of the car, and you will have the acceleration.
 
I don't think your force of friction is correct.

392.4N (40kg*9.81) is the weight of the car itself.

[Fy=0] Fsin30 + FN = 392.4 N

You can spot this error because your friction force is larger than any other force therefore the object wouldn't even move if that were the case. Unless this was a tricky question.

Once you have the friction force. Do Fx to find the net force. then use F=ma to find acceleration.
 
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I hope this diagram helps.

http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/996/vectop0.png​
 
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temaire, I don't think the problem states that the car is on an incline but rather being pulled at an angle.
 
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Oh I see, you're right about that. I'am just so used to seeing incline questions worded like that. Sorry for the confustion.
 
pooface said:
I don't think your force of friction is correct.

392.4N (40kg*9.81) is the weight of the car itself.

[Fy=0] Fsin30 + FN = 392.4 N

You can spot this error because your friction force is larger than any other force therefore the object wouldn't even move if that were the case. Unless this was a tricky question.

Once you have the friction force. Do Fx to find the net force. then use F=ma to find acceleration.

thats right, the new value for friction is 156.8, but I still don't understand how to add all the forces. I have friction, the horizontal and vertical components of the force applied, what else do I add?
 
I am getting 110.96 N as the frictional force.

Well now you have frictional force pushing one way and the force applied Fcos30 pushing the other. subtract them and you will find the net force pushing one way.

Keep in mind that if the frictional force is more, the object won't accelerate the other way, but rather be still.

You can then find acceleration by:

Fnet=mass*acceleration

What happened to the vertical force? Well Fy = 0 so the object is in equilibrium vertically. But Fx does not equal 0.
 
pooface said:
I am getting 110.96 N as the frictional force.

Well now you have frictional force pushing one way and the force applied Fcos30 pushing the other. subtract them and you will find the net force pushing one way.

Keep in mind that if the frictional force is more, the object won't accelerate the other way, but rather be still.

You can then find acceleration by:

Fnet=mass*acceleration

What happened to the vertical force? Well Fy = 0 so the object is in equilibrium vertically. But Fx does not equal 0.

thanks, but how did you got 110? I recalclated and had 156.8
 
  • #10
Fsin30 +FN = mg

FN= (40)(9.81) -230sin30 = 277.4N

Ffr = muFN
Ffr = 0.4(277.4) = 110.96 N

no?

How are you calculating it?
 
  • #11
pooface said:
Fsin30 +FN = mg

FN= (40)(9.81) -230sin30 = 277.4N

Ffr = muFN
Ffr = 0.4(277.4) = 110.96 N

no?

How are you calculating it?

f = m N N=-W
=> 0.40(392N) = 156.8N
 
  • #12
gonzalo12345 said:
f = m N N=-W
=> 0.40(392N) = 156.8N

This is not correct because the normal force is not 392N because there is a force acting on the object at an angle.

You have to use [sigmaFy=0] to find FN like I have.
 
  • #13
pooface said:
This is not correct because the normal force is not 392N because there is a force acting on the object at an angle.

You have to use [sigmaFy=0] to find FN like I have.

ok thanks, so I got 2.2 m/s2 for the acceleration
 
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