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AME 352 Online, HW-2 2-1 For This Six-Bar Mechanism We Have Defined Several Vectors That Can Be Used in Formulating The Kinematic

This document provides instructions for analyzing the kinematics of a six-bar mechanism using vector loop equations. It asks the student to: 1) Define angles and vectors for the mechanism and identify which remain constant or variable with motion. 2) Construct vector loop equations to describe the relationships between angles and vector magnitudes as the mechanism moves. 3) Repeat the process of defining vectors, angles, and constructing vector loop equations for two additional six-bar mechanism diagrams.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
112 views2 pages

AME 352 Online, HW-2 2-1 For This Six-Bar Mechanism We Have Defined Several Vectors That Can Be Used in Formulating The Kinematic

This document provides instructions for analyzing the kinematics of a six-bar mechanism using vector loop equations. It asks the student to: 1) Define angles and vectors for the mechanism and identify which remain constant or variable with motion. 2) Construct vector loop equations to describe the relationships between angles and vector magnitudes as the mechanism moves. 3) Repeat the process of defining vectors, angles, and constructing vector loop equations for two additional six-bar mechanism diagrams.

Uploaded by

qurriyatus zahro
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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AME 352 Online, HW-2

2-1 For this six-bar mechanism we have defined several vectors that can be used in formulating the kinematic
equations.
(a) Define angles θ1 ... θ 7 for the vectors according to our convention (the x-axis is horizontal, positive to the
right). Show these angles on the diagram.
(b) Measure the angles with a protractor in degrees.
(c) When the mechanism is in motion, which of the angles remain unchanged and which angles become
variables?
(d) When the mechanism is in motion, which of the vectors keep constant magnitudes and which vectors
will have variable magnitude?
(e) Two of the variable angles can be expressed as a function of one another through a simple relationship.
Which angles are those and what is the relationship?
(f) Two of the variable lengths can be expressed as a function of one another through a simple relationship.
Which vector lengths are those and what is the relationship? (All constant lengths and distances are
known quantities.)
(g) Use the mobility formula to determine the number of degrees-of-freedom for the system.
(h) Construct the vector-loop equation(s) for the system.

Write/mark the answers to (b), (c) and (d) in the table below.

Angle Magnitude Constant Variable Vector Constant Variable


(degrees)   magnitude  
θ1 R1
θ2 R2
θ3 R3
θ4 R4
θ5 R5
θ6 R6
θ7 R7

R1
R2
Q

R7
O
R5 R6
C

R4 R3
B
AME 352 Online, HW-2

2-2 For the shown mechanism define the necessary vectors and construct the associated vector-loop
equation(s).

2-3 For this six-bar mechanism we need to construct vector loop equations for kinematic analysis.
(a) Define and show on the figure the necessary vectors and their angles according to our convention. Make
sure not to define any unnecessarily extra angles.
(b) Construct the corresponding vector loop equation(s).

O2
O4
o
70

B C

O6

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