Hi Sara,
The best way for you to understand how the forces all act relative to point A is to break them down into their
rectangular components.
When I used to solve these types of problems at university I would always draw the following diagram to communicate to the people marking my assignments/exams what I took to be positive i.e. my
sign convention.
Any forces that point in the same direction as either my Y or X arrows I would take as positive forces. Any moments (force x lever arm) that would rotate in the anti-clockwise direction I would also take as positive. When students are first introduced to the concept of torque or
bending moments, many tutors use the "right hand rule" to establish a
sign convention. Simply raise your right hand in front of you, point your thumb towards your face and rotate your wrist such that your four other fingers rotate in a anti-clockwise motion. Your fingers will rotate in the same direction as the curved arrow in the sketch above. Any forces that try to spin your structure in this direction will be denoted as a
positive moment.
Let's now take the exercise you've been looking at and apply this.
To better understand how the force of 3kN acting in the "upper right corner" acts on your structure, it's best that you break the force into its
rectangular components. In the next diagram I have illustrated this for you.
I have annotated in red the
rectangular components in which the 3kN force at 30 degrees can be represented in the
"X-Y" Cartesian plane. Your understanding of basic vectors will allow you to better represent (and calculate both Fx and Fy) these forces as follows:
With this information I now pose to you the questions:
- Is the Force Fy positive or negative relative to your newly formed sign convention?
- What is the magnitude of Force Fy?
- In what direction will Force Fy cause the structure to spin about point A?
- Using our newly formed sign convention, is this spinning in the same direction as our curved arrow/fingers? Hence, is the direction of rotation positive of negative?
Should you be able to confidently answer these questions for Force Fy, attempt to do the same with Force Fx.