olmpiad Posted January 4, 2006 Posted January 4, 2006 A is made from two steel cables, overlaid with 2ftx6ft redwood lumber. It is 110 feet long, and sags down in the middle 5 feet lower than the ends of it. There are 400 pounds of wood in all.Each cable is rated at 2000lbs How much moreweight can this bridge support? Show or link to your proof, and show the formula used. In what ways does allowing extra sag affect the end result? What about if four cables were used rather than two? :confused:
ecoli Posted January 4, 2006 Posted January 4, 2006 If you expect people to do your homework for you, you'd better ask nicer. Or perhaps promise monetary incentive.
olmpiad Posted January 4, 2006 Author Posted January 4, 2006 "If you expect people to do your homework for you, you'd better ask nicer. Or perhaps promise monetary incentive." This is actually a question I saw on another website. I could not solve it, so I decided to give others a challenge to try.
ecoli Posted January 4, 2006 Posted January 4, 2006 "If you expect people to do your homework for you' date=' you'd better ask nicer. Or perhaps promise monetary incentive." This is actually a question I saw on another website. I could not solve it, so I decided to give others a challenge to try.[/quote'] my bad. in that case you should make sure people know it isn't you homework. the way the question was phrased made it seem that way. My apologies.
olmpiad Posted January 4, 2006 Author Posted January 4, 2006 "my bad. in that case you should make sure people know it isn't you homework. the way the question was phrased made it seem that way. My apologies. " No problem. Thank-you for the advice.
Illuminati Posted January 4, 2006 Posted January 4, 2006 *pssst* You know, you can press the quote button under the other persons post and it will do the quotation thing for you. And sorry, I have nothing substantial to add to this post.
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