A fixed pulley is attached to a surface and only changes the direction of the force applied, while a movable pulley is attached to the object being moved and changes both the direction and the amount of force required to move the object.
The three types of pulleys are fixed pulleys, movable (or movable) pulleys, and compound pulleys. Fixed pulleys change the direction of the force applied, movable pulleys provide a mechanical advantage by reducing the force needed, and compound pulleys combine fixed and movable pulleys for increased mechanical advantage.
A fixed pulley is stationary and changes the direction of force, while a movable pulley moves with the load and provides a mechanical advantage by distributing the force over multiple ropes. Fixed pulleys have a single attachment point, while movable pulleys have two attachment points—one fixed and one moving.
There are three main types of pulleys: fixed pulleys, movable pulleys, and compound pulleys. Fixed pulleys are attached to a stationary object, movable pulleys move with the load, and compound pulleys combine fixed and movable pulleys for increased mechanical advantage.
An elevator typically uses a combination of fixed and movable pulleys. The pulley at the top of the elevator shaft is fixed, while the pulleys attached to the elevator cab are movable. This setup allows for the efficient movement of the elevator cab up and down the shaft.
The three main types of pulleys are fixed pulleys, movable pulleys, and compound pulleys. Fixed pulleys are stationary and only change the direction of the force, while movable pulleys are attached to the object being moved and reduce the effort needed. Compound pulleys combine both fixed and movable pulleys to provide a mechanical advantage for lifting heavy loads.
single fixed pulley, single movable pulley and single fixed and movable pulley. :-)
Movable pully
for one movable pulley you would get a mechanical advantage of 2
The three types of pulleys are fixed pulleys, movable (or movable) pulleys, and compound pulleys. Fixed pulleys change the direction of the force applied, movable pulleys provide a mechanical advantage by reducing the force needed, and compound pulleys combine fixed and movable pulleys for increased mechanical advantage.
You can't have a "fixed" "movable" bridge, the two terms are contradictory.
A movable pulley is not fixed at all points. It has one end attached to a fixed point, such as a ceiling or beam, while the other end is attached to the object being lifted. The pulley itself is free to move along the rope or cable, allowing for mechanical advantage in lifting heavy loads.
Yes an elevator is a movable pulley!
With the string from the movable pulley
No difference other than one is easily relocated.
A fixed pulley is different from a movable pulley because a movable pulley has one end of the rope attached to it fixed on an unmoving object. The pulley is free to move with the rope. You pull the other end of the rope. Also, a movable pulley multiplies the applied force (effort force) and therefore has more mechanical advantage. A fixed pulley is attached to something that doesn't move, while one end of the rope is holding the weight, while the other is for pulling.A fixed pulley confers no mechanical advantage, but will convert motion in one direction into another direction.A movable pulley system, if the pulleys change their distance from each other, will confer a mechanical advantage.
A fixed pulley is stationary and changes the direction of force, while a movable pulley moves with the load and provides a mechanical advantage by distributing the force over multiple ropes. Fixed pulleys have a single attachment point, while movable pulleys have two attachment points—one fixed and one moving.
Movable and fixed.