bshadel
Mechanical
- Oct 22, 2006
- 7
Hi folks,
New to the forum, I’m getting ready to take the mechanical PE exam this Friday. I’ve been studying for a better part of the year and hope for some positive results.
I’ve come across a sample problem where I don’t agree with the solution. Perhaps someone can set me straight. By the way, this problem is from “Six-Minute Solutions for Mechanical PE Exam”.
Problem:
Water balloons are launched from a catapult on the rooftop of a building 50 feet off the ground. Balloons must achieve at least 100 yards (horizontal). Catapult spring constant is 0.5 lbf/in and can be extended no more than 5 inches. Weight of each balloon is 4.5 lbf, and each one takes approximately 1 second to launch. Under these conditions, how many springs in parallel will it take to launch 100 yards?
My solution:
I solved for an initial velocity that would send the balloon 100 yards. I then used energy methods to solve for the total spring constant: 1/2kx^2 = 1/2mv^2. Unfortunately my answer was way off.
Book solution:
The acceleration of the balloon was found from the 1 second launch to the terminal velocity in 5 inches. Knowing that, they said: (mass of balloon x acceleration) = (spring constant x 5 inches).
While the units work out, I don’t agree with this simply because the spring force is not constant and varies with the deflection. This is not the only problem like this…there is another that utilizes this type of solution. Am I missing something???
Any assistance is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Bryan.
New to the forum, I’m getting ready to take the mechanical PE exam this Friday. I’ve been studying for a better part of the year and hope for some positive results.
I’ve come across a sample problem where I don’t agree with the solution. Perhaps someone can set me straight. By the way, this problem is from “Six-Minute Solutions for Mechanical PE Exam”.
Problem:
Water balloons are launched from a catapult on the rooftop of a building 50 feet off the ground. Balloons must achieve at least 100 yards (horizontal). Catapult spring constant is 0.5 lbf/in and can be extended no more than 5 inches. Weight of each balloon is 4.5 lbf, and each one takes approximately 1 second to launch. Under these conditions, how many springs in parallel will it take to launch 100 yards?
My solution:
I solved for an initial velocity that would send the balloon 100 yards. I then used energy methods to solve for the total spring constant: 1/2kx^2 = 1/2mv^2. Unfortunately my answer was way off.
Book solution:
The acceleration of the balloon was found from the 1 second launch to the terminal velocity in 5 inches. Knowing that, they said: (mass of balloon x acceleration) = (spring constant x 5 inches).
While the units work out, I don’t agree with this simply because the spring force is not constant and varies with the deflection. This is not the only problem like this…there is another that utilizes this type of solution. Am I missing something???
Any assistance is greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Bryan.