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Mechanical advantage refers to the ratio of the force produced by a machine to the force applied to it. A lever with a mechanical advantage greater than one is used to increase distance.
A second class lever always has a mechanical advantage greater than 1.
The ratio of Mechanical Advantage and Velocity Ratio is Efficiency. That is to say the ratio of M.A. and V.R. is constant.
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well the advantage of that is pie, not math pie but pie that you eat
The mechanical advantage of a pulley can be greater than 1.The efficiency cannot but that is a different matter.
Mechanical advantage refers to the ratio of the force produced by a machine to the force applied to it. A lever with a mechanical advantage greater than one is used to increase distance.
A second class lever always has a mechanical advantage greater than 1.
it means the mechanical advantage is greater.
it means the mechanical advantage is greater.
A lever with a mechanical advantage greater than one is used to increase distance. A lever is a simple machine connected to ground by a hinge called a fulcrum.
The IMA of a machine is greater than 1 whenever the output force is greater than the input force.
increase distance.
lever, gear train
The ratio of Mechanical Advantage and Velocity Ratio is Efficiency. That is to say the ratio of M.A. and V.R. is constant.
output force (:
Second class lever. . . . Always greater than 1 . Third class lever . . . . . Always less than 1 . First class lever . . . . . Can be greater than 1 or less than 1 depending on position of fulcrum.