Matt, on May 10 2005, 04:15 PM, said:
Liftmech's method, which I copied, works because work is force times the the component that of the displacement that is parallel to the force. You could either calculate the tension in the cable that's not cancelled out on the other side, and multiply by the line speed. You never need to know the angle. Or, you could calculate the vertical component of velocity (as CAski did), and multiply by the vertical force. Both methods yield the same result.
<{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Okay, I think I see the logic in the equations you presented. But it is a very backward, awkward, and convoluted approach to me. Your "tension in the cable that's not cancelled out on the other side" looks to be the dPE for an average foot long section of the cable. This would be in vertical foot*lbs/foot. You are saying that a foot long piece of cable will undergo x amount of work to go from the bottom to the top of the lift. The entire amount of the cable on the uphill-travelling side will make it to the top in y amount of time. By multiplying the dPE per foot by the total amount of cable, you are calculating the total change in potential energy, or the work performed. By dividing the potential energy by the y amount of time, you get the power. Since the total amount of cable divided by y equals the speed, one can cut this intermediate step and say that the dPE for an average foot long section of cable multiplied by the speed equals the power. Time saving, perhaps, but I would argue that it is error-prone unless one understands the logic behind it.