A seesaw is a class one lever.
A fulcrum is a part of a simple machine, the lever. Without the fulcrum what is left of the simple machine can no longer increase the applied force and is no longer a simple machine.
A faucet handle and jar lid are simple machines.
Seesaw
d1 times w1 = d2 times w2 (d- distance of the person from seesaw)/ (w = weight of person)
When Linda Sue Park was ten years old, she read about 17th century Korean girls of good breeding who were not allowed to leave their homes. To find out about the world beyond their courtyards, they invented the seesaw to catapult themselves high enough to peek beyond the walls. Twenty-seven years later, Park wrote Seesaw Girl (Clarion, 1999) because the image she read about as a child had stuck with her. "When I sat down to write my first book, I knew that would be my idea
a seesaw is a lever that is balenced on a fulcrum
A seesaw is a lever balanced on a fulcrum.
crowbar &seesaw
A bicycle. the rest are simple machines.
A fulcrum is a part of a simple machine, the lever. Without the fulcrum what is left of the simple machine can no longer increase the applied force and is no longer a simple machine.
a seesaw is a lever that is balenced on a fulcrum
A see-saw is a type of lever. Levers are simple machines. When you put two or more simple machines together, you get a compound machine. == ==
When using position to balance two uneven weights, it is an example of a lever.
A faucet handle and jar lid are simple machines.
A seesaw is a basic lever and by definition it has a fulcrum. Without the fulcrum, there would be no point for the seesaw to operate on.
u would know this if u are not stupid. but anyway a doorknob and a steeringwheel and a seesaw. and some others
No, a seesaw is an example of a "lever".