Static EQ/Center of Mass problem

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A 65.0-kg person stands on a non-uniform 10.0-m board supported by scales at each end, reading 753 N on the left and 619 N on the right. The mass of the board was calculated to be 75 kg, but the center of mass was initially miscalculated. The discussion focused on applying torque equilibrium to find the correct center of mass, emphasizing the need to sum torques around a pivot point. After correcting the torque signs and including all forces, the correct center of mass was determined to be 6.26 m from the left end. The conversation highlights the importance of careful setup in torque problems and the influence of all forces involved.
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Homework Statement



A 65.0-kg person stands on a horizontal board. The board is 10.0-m long and is NOT perfectly uniform. The person stands 1/4 of the way from the left end of the board. The board is supported at each end by a scale. The scale on the left reads 753 N and the scale on the right reads 619 N.

What is the mass of the board?
How far from the left end is the board's center of mass?

Staticsproblem.jpg


My digital drawing skills are just as solid as my math skills.

Homework Equations



None/unsure

The Attempt at a Solution



I was able to get the mass of the board (75kg) but unable to calculate the center of mass. It seems like integration would do the trick, but my class has been a bit skimpy on the calculus and I'm unsure how to set it up. Otherwise balancing the torques makes sense, but I can't get rid of the person's influence on the scales. I apologize if this isn't much of an attempt at a solution, but I've tried to look at this thing a bunch of different ways and can't seem to get very far.

Thanks for the help!

Ben
 
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You've found the mass of the board, so now find its weight. You should be familiar with Newton's first law of rotational equilibrium: The sum of the torques of all forces about any point must equal zero. So try summing torques of all forces about the left end, to solve for the unknown distance of the center of the boards mass from the left end.
 
Alright, here's what I did.

(CCW is positive)
Torque= -75kg(9.8m/s^2) X(COM) + 2.5m(65kg)(9.8m/s^2) = 0

I actually got a reasonable answer (2.17m), just not the right one (6.26m). I must still be setting something up the wrong way. Thanks for the help Jay.
 
The boards weight and the person's weight both produce clockwise torques about the left end, so why did you choose plus for the person's weight? Also, what about the torque from the right end reaction?
 
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I talked to my prof, fixed the signs and put the 619N(L) on the other side and got the correct answer. Thanks again.
 
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