I wish I didJonB wrote:Yes.DannyTheAwesome wrote:Did you compete in nationals last year?
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_e_sad.gif)
I wish I didJonB wrote:Yes.DannyTheAwesome wrote:Did you compete in nationals last year?
Unome wrote:Yeah, that's a better explanation than mine.retired1 wrote:Measured from the fulcrum, distance left times weight = distance right times that weight. Or d1wt 1 = d2 wt2 or wt1/wt2 = d2/d1 There is your ratio. They are labeled wt A, B, and C: the way you assign the weight letters, it is either the ratio above or the inverse of it. Say the distances are 50 for A and 30 for B. The ratio of A/B would be A/B = 30/50 or simplified = 3/5 If the ratio was B/A it would be 50/30 or 5/3
Follow the rules! I believe the rules say something about following the standard rules of significant figures, so you should resolve the fraction and apply rules of sigfigs.MP Fan wrote:Coach here... The two distances are rarely whole numbers. So when the students provide their ratios, should they provide fractions or should they resolve the fractions?
As an example, let's say dA is 18.4 cm and dB is is 5.3 cm. Should their answer for the ratio A/B be 5.3/18.4? Or should they go ahead and resolve the fraction and provide the answer as .29?
So many of the supervisors are going to ignore the sig figs again that I'm probably just going to ask them about it (since a lot of other teams will likely ignore it too)chinesesushi wrote:Follow the rules! I believe the rules say something about following the standard rules of significant figures, so you should resolve the fraction and apply rules of sigfigs.MP Fan wrote:Coach here... The two distances are rarely whole numbers. So when the students provide their ratios, should they provide fractions or should they resolve the fractions?
As an example, let's say dA is 18.4 cm and dB is is 5.3 cm. Should their answer for the ratio A/B be 5.3/18.4? Or should they go ahead and resolve the fraction and provide the answer as .29?
chinesesushi wrote:Follow the rules! I believe the rules say something about following the standard rules of significant figures, so you should resolve the fraction and apply rules of sigfigs.MP Fan wrote:Coach here... The two distances are rarely whole numbers. So when the students provide their ratios, should they provide fractions or should they resolve the fractions?
As an example, let's say dA is 18.4 cm and dB is is 5.3 cm. Should their answer for the ratio A/B be 5.3/18.4? Or should they go ahead and resolve the fraction and provide the answer as .29?
So what ended up happening at the invitational?MP Fan wrote:The reason I posted this question is that the rules do not say whether you should resolve each fraction. I've reviewed the materials from the SOSI and the Midwest Coaching Academy. No luck.
We have an invitational Saturday. The students plan to resolve the fractions. We'll see what happens.
It's Division C, so the students know to use sigfigs for all events.
Thanks for your advice.