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chickjenww
No, there are 3 types of load-fulcrum-effort systems and the fulcrum depends upon the effort and the load of the system...
This will occur if the fulcrum is closer to the load than the effort.
WHER
load, fulcrum and effort
The fulcrum is between the effort and the load.
A relationship between two of it are when load come closer to fulcrum, you need more effort to use. But if load go far away from the fulcrum, you need less effort to use. A relationship between two of it are when load come closer to fulcrum, you need more effort to use. But if load go far away from the fulcrum, you need less effort to use.
chickjenww
No, there are 3 types of load-fulcrum-effort systems and the fulcrum depends upon the effort and the load of the system...
The magnitude of the effort is controlled by you, not by the distance of the load from the fulcrum. Moving the load farther away from the fulcrum has no effect on the effort. But if you want to leave the effort where it is and still lift the load with the lever, then you're going to have to increase the effort.
well the effort is in the middle as it is your hand moving while the fulcrum is your elbow and the rod is the load.
The effort is the point on the back where the hand presses the stapler. The load is the staple. The fulcrum is the hinge at the back.
The fulcrum is the swing hinges and the effort is the seat, you sitting in it would be the load.
A Lever comprises of three components:Fulcrum or Pivot - the point about which the lever rotatesLoad or Resistance - the object that requires movingEffort - the force applied by the user of the lever system
load arm, effort arm, load, effort, fulcrum!
This will occur if the fulcrum is closer to the load than the effort.
Third class: Fulcrum is the condyles, effort is the masseter muscle, and load is whatever you're chewing on.