Understanding Hinge Reactions: Debunking Common Misconceptions

Svelte1
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Homework Statement
https://postimg.cc/JtP2h113
Relevant Equations
f=ma
https://postimg.cc/JtP2h113
243800

I think I may have forgotten some more basic elements of tension and normal reactions. I do not understand why the vertical component of the normal reaction =Tsin60-15g

Because Tsin60-15g is negative when resolving upwards, i would have thought this meant that the normal vertical reaction would have to be upwards so that that we would have 0 acceleration
 
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Svelte1 said:
why the vertical component of the normal reaction =Tsin60-15g
You mean the reaction at the wall, not the normal reaction. (By definition, the normal reaction would be at right angles to the wall.)
Whether it is Tsin60-15g or 15g-Tsin60 depends on which way you are defining as positive. Tsin60-15g is right if down is positive.
 
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haruspex said:
You mean the reaction at the wall, not the normal reaction. (By definition, the normal reaction would be at right angles to the wall.)
Whether it is Tsin60-15g or 15g-Tsin60 depends on which way you are defining as positive. Tsin60-15g is right if down is positive.

In the books workings it says they are resolving vertically upwards and clarifies that it is indeed the reaction at the hinge:
https://postimg.cc/Wtn5VyxJ
 
Svelte1 said:
that it is indeed the reaction at the hinge:
Yes, reaction at the hinge, not normal reaction.

The book is wrong about the direction. If you take moments about B, both weights have a clockwise torque, so the hinge reaction must be upwards.
 
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