Correct for one. I wouldn’t put belt too for two. The correct answer for 3 is 9.6 kg. I guess theAlfWeg wrote: ↑September 26th, 2019, 5:26 pmI'll take a stab at it...AwersomeUser wrote: ↑September 26th, 2019, 5:09 pm Ah! Sorry, I forgot to hide my answer...
1) Most machines have an actual mechanical advantage of more less one. True/False
2) The following is an example of what kind of simple machines?
3) A boy and a girl each sits on one end of a seesaw. When the 120 kg girl sits down, the boy rises/goes up by 0.4 m; when the boy sits down, the girl rise/goes up by 20 cm. How heavy is the boy in kilogram?
(Hope the wording isn’t too confusing)
1) Most have more than one AMA
2) Belt and Pulley, or just 2 pulleys
3) 60KG? I'm more than a bit confused on this question, is this even possible?
problem doesn’t make sense with a boy that weights 9.6 kg. (Ugh... If someone’s 9.6 kg they are probably still a baby/toddler, not a boy...) I was going to make him weigh 96 kg... How did you get 60 kg? Maybe I am wrong.




