I know torque= radius x forcethus if i want to loosen a bolt the longer my wrench the more torque i exert.I was thinking though how does this obey the conservation of energy principal? E= integral (force*dx)x=distanceAs it seems like I have to exert a lot more force if i use my fingers to stubbornly loosen the bolt while with a 1 foot long wrench the effort seems minimal.
2/2/2008 5:03:03 PM
Maybe it's because your fingers travel a much smaller distance x because the radius is smaller.Say, you turn a bolt with your fingers with 10 lbs of force for only 1 inch. Well, maybe you only need to exert 2 lbs on the wrench, but now your exerting that force over 5 inches instead over 1 inch. The same work is done i.e. Case 1= 10lbs* 1 inch= 10 in-lbsCase 2= 2lbs* 5inch= 10 in-lbsbut you've exerted 2 different forces with the same resultant work[Edited on February 2, 2008 at 5:21 PM. Reason : over]
2/2/2008 5:20:41 PM
2/2/2008 5:42:03 PM
i love angular momentum.
2/2/2008 6:02:02 PM
i like the word tangential
2/2/2008 6:09:39 PM
2/2/2008 6:24:46 PM
what is confusing didnt you answer your own question
2/2/2008 7:40:53 PM
oh i was thinking the distance was the distance the bolt physically rotates not the position to which the force is applied.
2/2/2008 8:08:29 PM
"distance" is the distance that the force acts through
2/2/2008 8:46:51 PM
2/2/2008 8:58:15 PM
boy this sure is a stupid thread
2/2/2008 11:38:56 PM
nahh i had to do something for work with a torque screw and couldnt figure some shit out
2/3/2008 12:52:39 AM
2/3/2008 8:50:37 AM
yes they areif the units are the same they are interchangeable they have to be...thats one of the underlying principles of dimensionality
2/3/2008 11:45:29 AM
Well, it's not quite that simple. Energy is a scalar quantity, whereas torque (r X F) is a vector. An analogy that might be helpful is speed and velocity. Same units, but not strictly interchangeable. Maybe Wikipedia can help, too.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torque#Units
2/3/2008 1:53:45 PM
Are you majoring in MAE? If so, its going to be a looong road for you
2/3/2008 5:27:15 PM
2/3/2008 6:16:55 PM
don't worry, he's majoring in cash. the only place he might need an understanding of torque is that posterior physics class to get his minor in ass.
2/3/2008 6:18:02 PM
[Edited on February 3, 2008 at 6:38 PM. Reason :
2/3/2008 6:35:31 PM
First this guy says torque is the same as energy, then he says it's the same as work. What a tard.
2/3/2008 10:33:07 PM
Torque is an angular force, not work. The force you put on the lever arm over the arc length turned to loosen the lugnut is work. If the lug nut is stuck and you put 100 lbs of force at a distance of 1 foot, the lug nut does not move, you have not exerted any work. A force yes, and a torque of 100 ft-lbs but no work has been done.You push a box 1 ft. across the floor with 100 lbs of force, you have done 100 ft-lbs of work, but have not exerted any torque on the box. Torque and work are not the same and cannot be interchanged as such. If you don't understand that, you should go re-read statics and dynamics books.
2/3/2008 10:56:43 PM
T = F x rW = F x dsame damn thing, different co-ordinate systemsyou guys have it all wrong
[Edited on February 3, 2008 at 11:08 PM. Reason :
2/3/2008 11:06:57 PM
so, work is the same as energy, which is the same as torque?that's hilariousi hope you aren't an engineer
2/3/2008 11:14:54 PM
you are all wrong guisethey are the same thing
2/3/2008 11:20:11 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torque#Relationship_between_torque.2C_power_and_energy
2/3/2008 11:44:36 PM
at this point you're probably just trolling, but if torque and work were the same, there would be no reason to rate engines for both horsepower and torque.
2/3/2008 11:49:33 PM
dudesrsly power is work per time and torque is workwhat are you thinking
2/4/2008 12:31:42 AM
I'm glad you think so
2/4/2008 6:11:59 AM
Work is scalar and torque is vector, period.however
2/4/2008 8:47:04 AM
no work is a vector too
2/4/2008 9:20:11 AM
no, it is not.edit: yes its obvious youre trolling but i felt like answering anyways [Edited on February 4, 2008 at 10:05 AM. Reason : ]
2/4/2008 10:01:55 AM
2/4/2008 11:58:36 AM
dude i can draw a picture showing that work is a vectorit is directionally dependentif you cant see that you are the one that needs to not be an engineer
2/4/2008 1:55:10 PM
lol, its a little old now.
2/4/2008 3:26:57 PM
dude got owned and tried to play it off like he was trolling?wow. wtg guy
2/4/2008 5:12:27 PM
well im not sure who you are referring to ^ and its sure hard to tell if people are trolling or not on these boards. but i sure hope Aficionado is trolling.[Edited on February 4, 2008 at 5:39 PM. Reason : ]
2/4/2008 5:30:07 PM
So basically if a giant turn table spins with enough torque, and helicopter sitting on top of it will take off, right?
2/4/2008 11:12:59 PM
basicallyit is the opposite reason why the airplane didnt take off
2/5/2008 10:48:13 AM