You are on page 1of 7

Sometimes the motions of particles are interrelated because of the constraints imposed by

interconnecting members. In such cases, it is necessary to account for these constraints in


order to determine the respective motions of the particles.

Consider first the very simple system of two Reference


interconnected particles A and B. It should Line
be quite evident by inspection that the
horizontal motion of A is twice the motion
of B. We can illustrate this by using the
method of analysis which applies to more
complex situations where the results cannot The total length of the cable is

be easily obtained by inspection.  r2


L  x  2 y   r1  b
2
( Here , L, r2 ,r1 , ,b are cons tan t )
 r2
L  x  2 y   r1  b
2 Reference
Line
The first and second time derivatives of the equation give:

0  x  2 y or 0  v A  2vB

0  x  2 y or 0  a A  2aB

The velocity and acceleration constraint equations indicate that, for the
coordinates selected, the velocity of A must have a sign which is opposite to
that of the velocity of B, and similarly for the accelerations. The constraint
equations are valid for motion of the system in either direction. We
emphasize that vA is positive to the left and that vB is positive down.
The system with two degrees of
Reference
Line freedom is shown here. The positions
of the lower cylinder and pulley C
depend on the separate
specifications of the two coordinates
2. cable 1. cable
yA and yB.

1. Cable Length:

L1  y A  2 yD  cons tan t  0  y A  2 y D  0  yA  2 yD


0  v A  2vD and 0  a A  2aD
2. Cable Length:

L2  y B  yC   yC  y D   cons tan t

0  y B  2 yC  y D or 0  vB  2vC  vD
0  yB  2 yC  yD or 0  a B  2aC  a D
1. Cylinder B has a downward velocity of 0.6 m/s and upward
acceleration of 0.15 m/s2. Calculate the velocity and
acceleration of block A.
sA

Cable Length:

sB L  2s A  3s B  cons tan t

0  2v A  3vB  0  2a A  3aB

v A  1.5vB  1.50.6  0.9 m / s ( Up the incline )


a A  1.5aB  1.5 0.15  0.225 m / s 2 ( Down the incline )
2. For the pulley system shown, each of the cables at A and
B is given a velocity of 2 m/s in the direction of the arrow.
Determine the upward velocity v of the load m.
x2 x1
vA=2 m/s
vB=2 m/s

y1
y2
y2 y1

x
x1  2 y1  cons tan t  x1  2 y1  0 y1   1
2
x2  y2   y2  y1   cons tan t  x2  2 y 2  y1  0

 x 
x2  2 y 2    1   0
 2
x x 2 2
y 2   2  1     1.5 m / s 
2 4 2 4
3. Neglect the diameters of the small pulleys and establish
the relationship between the velocity of A and the velocity
of B for a given value of y.

L  2 x  3 y 2  b 2  cons tan t
yy
L  2 x  3 0 x  v A and y  vB
y 2  b2
3 yv A
vB  
2 y 2  b2
4. Collars A and B slide along the fixed right-angle rods and
are connected by a cord of length L. Determine the
acceleration of collar B as a function of y if collar A is given
a constant upward velocity vA.

vA

vB x 2  y 2  L2  x 2  L2  y 2
yy
2 xx  2 yy  0  x  
x
x 2  xx  y 2  yy  0 y  v A  cons tan t y  0
2
 yy  2
    
y
x 2  y 2  x  L2v 2A
x    
x x 2
L y 
2 3/ 2

You might also like