Levers and Pulleys

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Levers and Pulleys

description

Levers and Pulleys. Levers. A lever is a tool that people use to make work easier. Levers are used to lift things or overcome resistance. Levers give us an advantage by making work easier. . Vocabulary. The lever arm is a stick or beam, that can pivot or turn at a point. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Levers and Pulleys

Page 1: Levers and Pulleys

Levers and Pulleys

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Levers

• A lever is a tool that people use to make work easier.

• Levers are used to lift things or overcome resistance.

• Levers give us an advantage by making work easier.

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Vocabulary

• The lever arm is a stick or beam, that can pivot or turn at a point.

• The fulcrum is the point around which the lever arm pivots or turns

• The mass lifted by the lever is the load. • The effort is the force (push or pull) needed to

lift or pull the load

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Challenge:

• Set the load at 15 cm. • Can you lift load using 1 finger? • Does it always take same effort to lift load?• Where should you press to lift load with least effort?• • Discuss in groups: What advantage can be gained by

using the lever to lift the load?• How can you measure advantage provided by the

lever?

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Practice reading spring scale

• Spring scales measure the effort needed to lift the load

• Effort is a force. Force is measured in Newtons.

• Use the scale right side up. Hang it, and pull down on bottom hook. The amount of force is read directly from the scale.

• Spring scale

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Rules for using scales:

• Always be sure the scale reads zero.• Use it right side up, not upside down.• Pull until the lever arm is level, then read the scale in

Newtons. • Stop before the scale goes past 10 N.• Additional rules – scale readings are made from the top

of the metal bar• Each little line represents .2 N. When indicator is

between 2 lines, students should estimate to nearest .1 N.

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How much force is necessary to lift load?

• A scale is helpful to determine how much force is necessary. Force is measured in Newtons

• Today, the load stays at 10cm. • Effort is applied at different distances from the

fulcrum. • Record the scale reading on the left side of the

effort column.

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Lever Experiment A

Demonstrate the force of the scale: Put load 5 cm from fulcrum.

Put scale 25 cm on other side.

Pull down to balance.

Read scale. How can this be?

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Lever Experiment B

• Using the graphs for both Lever Experiment A and Lever Experiment B, answer this question.

• Where should you put the load, and where should you put the effort, for the greatest advantage? Where is it easiest to lift the load?

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Lever Classes

• Does the fulcrum always have to be in between the load and the effort?

• If the fulcrum is not in the middle, is it still a lever? Is there an advantage to moving the fulcrum to a different position on the lever arm?

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Lever ClassIt’s as easy as:1 2 3F L E The number stands for the class. The letter stands for what’s in the middle.

ABC Baby you and me!

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Remember123 FLE

Label each drawing and then identify the lever class

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Real Life Levers

• Go back to the first slide and label the fulcrum, the load, and the effort. Then identify the class of lever.

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Pulleys

• A wheel with a grooved rim in which rope can run to change the direction of the pull that lifts the load.

• Task: How can a pulley be used to lift a load?

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Pulley’s Advantage

Pulleys can give two kinds of advantage: • Reduced effort is called mechanical

advantage• Pulleys can also change the direction that the

effort is applied. That is called directional advantage.

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Pulleys Lesson 2

• How are fixed and movable pulleys the same? • What kind of advantage is produced by each

system?• In what way are levers and pulleys the same?

• Is there any advantage to using two pulleys at the same time?

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Drawing Pulley Diagrams

• Draw an anchor point at top• Draw large dot to show where rope attaches. • Draw lines to show how rope goes around

pulley• Draw load and effort using same symbols and

letters

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