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25.4: Lever

  • Page ID
    92233
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    \(\delta \omega \varsigma \mu o \iota \pi \alpha \sigma \tau \omega \kappa \alpha \iota \tau \alpha \nu \gamma \alpha \nu \kappa \iota \nu \alpha \sigma \omega\). (Give me a place to stand, and I shall move the Earth.)

    —Archimedes

    In this famous quote, Archimedes is referring to the lever. A lever is a rigid bar free to turn around a pivot point called the fulcrum. Levers may be divided into three classes, according to the relative position of the effort, resistance, and fulcrum (Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)):

    clipboard_eebf1774ee23558305f4ac7e4fb19d2d1.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): The three classes of levers. (Ref. [17])
    • First class - the fulcrum is between the resistance and the effort.
    • Second class - the resistance is between the fulcrum and the effort.
    • Third class — the effort is between the fulcrum and the resistance.

    The mechanical advantage of the lever may be found simply. The distance from the effort to the fulcrum is called the effort arm \(\left(r_{E}\right)\); the distance from the fulcrum to the resistance is called the resistance arm \(\left(r_{R}\right)\). Then in the absence of friction, the input work equals the output work:

    \[W_{i}=W_{o}\]

    or

    \[F_{E} r_{E}=F_{R} r_{R}\]

    Thus the mechanical advantage is then \(F_{R} / F_{E}\), or the effort arm divided by the resistance arm:

    \[M . A .=\frac{r_{E}}{r_{R}}\]

    clipboard_e13ec4c0b8e2994f215cb4c73a9c3b246.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): A jackscrew, here used to lift the back of a truck. (Ref. [17])


    25.4: Lever is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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