I'm sorry but it seems like you are making up different numbers and not explaining where you got them. Like for 5:35, where did you even get 130 from. Or AB= W/sin30, how did you even get 1.155??? I'm not really following what you are teaching because you keep jumping ahead instead of explaining where you are getting your numbers from.
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At 2:32 Where do you get AB = 1.155W N from? I get 0.866
I believe it should be 0.866 any other way of calculating it does not come to 1.155
(1/sin60)=W@@shoving6462
So I did 1/sin60 and got 1.155
@@SeanBook001 i think youre right on that one
is the W standing for weight??
Yes
I'm sorry but it seems like you are making up different numbers and not explaining where you got them. Like for 5:35, where did you even get 130 from. Or AB= W/sin30, how did you even get 1.155??? I'm not really following what you are teaching because you keep jumping ahead instead of explaining where you are getting your numbers from.
Ok my bad on the 5:35 one, that is definitely BD and not 130. But still IDK where you got 1.155 from
From summation of forces along y at joint A, ABsin60-w=0, AB=W/sin60=1.155W
and what is W in this coincidence?
@@EngineersAcademy2020
how did get your values for AE and AB?
AE and AB are in the form of W and not absolute...
Sir why can't the force AE=500N???
how did u get 1.155w??
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