1. The small bridge consists of an 1,800-lb uniform deck EF (thin plate), two overhead beams AB (slender rods), each having a weight of 200 lb, and a 2,400-lb counterweight BC, which can be considered as a thin plate having the dimensions shown. The weight of the tie rods AE can be neglected. If the operator lets go of the rope when the bridge is at an at-rest position, = 45°, determine the speed at which the end of the deck E hits the roadway step at H, = 0°. The bridge is pin-connected at A, D, E, and F.





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MCQ->The small bridge consists of an 1,800-lb uniform deck EF (thin plate), two overhead beams AB (slender rods), each having a weight of 200 lb, and a 2,400-lb counterweight BC, which can be considered as a thin plate having the dimensions shown. The weight of the tie rods AE can be neglected. If the operator lets go of the rope when the bridge is at an at-rest position, = 45°, determine the speed at which the end of the deck E hits the roadway step at H, = 0°. The bridge is pin-connected at A, D, E, and F.....
MCQ-> I want to stress this personal helplessness we are all stricken with in the face of a system that has passed beyond our knowledge and control. To bring it nearer home, I propose that we switch off from the big things like empires and their wars to more familiar little things. Take pins for example! I do not know why it is that I so seldom use a pin when my wife cannot get on without boxes of them at hand; but it is so; and I will therefore take pins as being for some reason specially important to women.There was a time when pinmakers would buy the material; shape it; make the head and the point; ornament it; and take it to the market, and sell it and the making required skill in several operations. They not only knew how the thing was done from beginning to end, but could do it all by themselves. But they could not afford to sell you a paper of pins for the farthing. 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The result is that with the exception of a few people who design the machines, nobody knows how to make a pin or how a pin is made: that is to say, the modern worker in pin manufacture need not be one-tenth so intelligent, skilful and accomplished as the old pinmaker; and the only compensation we have for this deterioration is that pins are so cheap that a single pin has no expressible value at all. Even with a big profit stuck on to the cost-price you can buy dozens for a farthing; and pins are so recklessly thrown away and wasted that verses have to be written to persuade children (without success) that it is a sin to steal, if even it’s a pin.Many serious thinkers, like John Ruskin and William Morris, have been greatly troubled by this, just as Goldsmith was, and have asked whether we really believe that it is an advance in wealth to lose our skill and degrade our workers for the sake of being able to waste pins by the ton. 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