Remember Me?
Menu
Home
Search
Today's Posts
Home
Search
Today's Posts
BoatBanter.com
»
rec.boats
»
General
>
Why need anchor chain?
LinkBack
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Display Modes
Prev
Next
#
10
JAXAshby
Posts: n/a
whoring, once you lose sight of a trick, you lose sight of anthing real.
try again, this time without anything in your mouth.
From: JohnH
Date: 9/18/2004 8:34 PM Eastern Daylight Time
Message-id:
On 18 Sep 2004 23:14:45 GMT,
(JAXAshby) wrote:
a way to simplified look at it is to consider the chain/rode/line to have
zero
weight pulled between two points (say 100 feet apart), then hang a 1#
weight
in
the center point and check how much strain it put on the end points when
the
weight hangs 20 feet, then 10 feet, then 5 feet, then 1 foot, then 1 inch,
then
1/10th inch. Just use trig to figure the forces.
So what would the forces be using your example?
I don't have a trig calc handy, but do this. divide 50 feet by 20 feet,
then
10 feet, then 5 feet, then 1 foot, then 1 inch, then 1/10th inch. that will
give you the tangent of each angle.
look up each tangent, then divide each number into 1#. that will give you
the
#'s force on the end points of the line.
a catenary is worse and much, much, much more difficult to calculate, but
the
above will give you an idea of the HUGE forces involved once the chain
starts
to pull tight
50/20=2.5
50/10=5
50/5=10
50/1=50
50/1/12=600
50/1/120=6000
If each of these are divided into 1, the results would be, respectively:
0.4
0.2
0.1
0.02
0.001666...
0.0001666...
These numbers don't look so big. Could you have made an error?
John H
On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD,
on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay!
Reply With Quote
Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Show Printable Version
Search this Thread
:
Advanced Search
Display Modes
Switch to Linear Mode
Switch to Hybrid Mode
Threaded Mode
Posting Rules
Smilies
are
On
[IMG]
code is
Off
HTML code is
Off
Trackbacks
are
On
Pingbacks
are
On
Refbacks
are
On
All times are GMT +1. The time now is
07:39 AM
.
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 BoatBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
Contact Us
BoatBanter Home
Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2017
LinkBack
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks