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.
A seesaw in a playground is an example of a fulcrum. The board that the children sit on acts as the lever, while the point where the seesaw pivots is the fulcrum. The position of the fulcrum determines the balance and movement of the seesaw.
The fulcrum on a seesaw is the support point at which the seesaw pivots or rotates. It serves as the balance point for the seesaw to ensure that both ends move up and down equally.
The center of a seesaw is called the "fulcrum." It is the pivot point around which the seesaw moves up and down.
Usually the centre; sometimes above, sometimes below and rarely level with the arms of it.
The point supporting a seesaw or lever is called the fulcrum. This is the pivot point around which the lever rotates when a force is applied on one side. The position of the fulcrum can affect the mechanical advantage and balance of the seesaw or lever.
A seesaw in a playground is an example of a fulcrum. The board that the children sit on acts as the lever, while the point where the seesaw pivots is the fulcrum. The position of the fulcrum determines the balance and movement of the seesaw.
The fulcrum on a seesaw is the support point at which the seesaw pivots or rotates. It serves as the balance point for the seesaw to ensure that both ends move up and down equally.
Fulcrum
the fulcrum's in the middle and yes a lever is a seesaw...
a seesaw is a lever that is balenced on a fulcrum
The center of a seesaw is called the "fulcrum." It is the pivot point around which the seesaw moves up and down.
Usually the centre; sometimes above, sometimes below and rarely level with the arms of it.
A see-saw is a fulcrum type of lever.
The point supporting a seesaw or lever is called the fulcrum. This is the pivot point around which the lever rotates when a force is applied on one side. The position of the fulcrum can affect the mechanical advantage and balance of the seesaw or lever.
They are post examples of a fulcrum and lever
Yes, as long as the weight is equal on both sides and equidistant from the fulcrum, the seesaw will remain balanced even if the plank is not perfectly horizontal. The torque generated by the weights on either side of the fulcrum will still be equal, keeping the seesaw balanced.
A rake seesaw and nutcracker are alike because they are all levers. they are also have a fulcrum and they are simple machines