Well, it has feelings. Don't talk about it like that. For what are you used?
You can create simple machines at home using waste materials like cardboard, plastic bottles, and bottle caps. For a lever, use a sturdy stick as the beam and a bottle cap as the fulcrum, placing weights on one end to see how it balances. For a pulley, thread a string through a plastic bottle top and attach it to a support, allowing you to lift small objects. Lastly, a inclined plane can be made by propping a piece of cardboard at an angle to roll a ball down, demonstrating the mechanics of simple machines.
knife, bottle cap, broom, mop, sink handle, sink, oven door, fridge door, can opener, cheese grater, blinds, pizza cutter
The wheel.
One of the simple machines is the wheel-and-axle, and bike wheels would fit that description
Cars are complex/compund Machines, consisting of (way) more than one simple machine.
A vise has 2 simple machines, a screw and a lever, but the main one is the screw.
4 toothpicks, inset one in each of the slots. What the toothpicks need to do is push the 4 tabs out that are geared to the body. Its really quite simple.
unicycle is one,
Bottle openers are simple levers. Whether they are cap lifters or twist top removers, they allow the operator to apply a force on the end of the lever to either pry or torque the cap off. Simple and easy.
inside there is like this epoxy/hot glue in the middle of a bottle cap necklace. how i should know is because i made one at like a church activity.
they are nothing alike you idiot....one has one machine and the other has two...stupid
Oh, dude, the diameter of a 2-liter bottle cap is typically around 28-33 millimeters. But like, who really measures a bottle cap, am I right? Just grab a ruler and give it a quick check if you're that curious.