(Hooke\'s Law) In Haiti, public transportation is often by taptaps, small pickup
ID: 1510036 • Letter: #
Question
(Hooke's Law) In Haiti, public transportation is often by taptaps, small pickup trucks with seats along the sides of the pickup bed and railings to which passengers can hang on. Typically they carry two dozen or more passengers plus an assortment of chickens, goats, luggage, etc. Putting this much into the back of a pickup truck puts quite a large load on the truck springs. A truck has springs for each wheel, but for simplicity assume that the individual springs can be treated as one spring with a spring constant that includes the effect of all the springs. Also for simplicity, assume that all four springs compress equally when weight is added to the truck and that the equilibrium length of the springs is the length they have the load of an empty truck. k= 28612.5 N/m After driving a portion of the route, the taptap is fully loaded with a total of 26 people including the driver, with an average mass of 70 kg per person. In addition, there are three 15-kg goats, five 3-kg chickens, and a total of 25 kg of bananas on their way to the market. Assume that the springs have somehow not yet compressed to their maximum amount. How much are the springs compressed?Explanation / Answer
F = ma = kx
x= ma/k
The total mass is 1905 kg
(1905x9.8)/28612.5= 0.652 = 0.65 m
Ans- Springs are compressed by 0.65m
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