The effect of a torque is to produce angular acceleration and that of the force is to produce linear acceleration. Since the effects of both torque and force are entirely different, therefore, a torque cannot be balanced by a single force.
-- "Inertia" is not a force. -- There is no such thing as a single balanced force or a single unbalanced force.
When a lever is balanced, the clockwise torque must equal the counterclockwise torque. This means that the product of the force applied and the distance from the pivot point must be the same on both sides of the lever.
Rotational force is usually spoken of as torque. Torque is a term we use to talk about a force that acts on a body to change its rate of rotation. It is the rotational equivalent of force in a linear motion system. A torque can arise from a single offset-applied force (using "inertial force" or "central bearing / pin force" to generate the balanced couple), from multiple applied forces, or when analyzing structures... from the slices of the structure outside the area of consideration. Roughly, it is a "force times a closest distance", even if that distance is to a point not on the structure under consideration. See the below link for formalism. In general, a torque does not produce linear displacement of the thing that is being "torqued", but nets to zero displacement over some length or some time. Technically, torque is the turning effect of a couple while moment of a force is the turning effect due to a single force but they are often interchanged. Torque is a type of force that causes an object to rotate.
balanced force is when things are balanced.
The rotational equivalent of a force is a torque. Note, however, that a torque is no longer a force - it is a force multiplied by a distance.
NO. not at all b/c torque is directly related to force
The turning effect of a force is called torque. Torque is the measure of the force that can cause an object to rotate around an axis.
Torque is Force you silly duffa
torque = force * lever length torque = 15 * 55 torque = 825 n-cms
Torque is not a force itself, but it is a measure of the rotational force applied to an object. In physics, torque is related to force through the concept of leverage and the distance from the point of rotation. The greater the torque applied, the greater the rotational force exerted on an object.
no because to get a torque you must multiply lever arm by force. If lever is zero, then torque is zero
Flywheel or torque converter.Flywheel or torque converter.