Physics debate

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tkarhu
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Re: Physics debate

Post by tkarhu » Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:10 pm

lowangle al wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 12:44 pm
When you lift the heel it puts tension on the spring, which wants to lighten your tail there by loading the tip. It's simple stone age technology, a lever.
@GrimSurfer What do you say about Al's lever hypothesis?

I think it expresses something meaningful in a simple way, similar to the illustration in my latest message.

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GrimSurfer
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Re: Physics debate

Post by GrimSurfer » Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:29 pm

tkarhu wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:04 pm
Heel lift power and binding resistance seem not to be opposing forces. Rather, a binding resistance allows some of a heel lift force to be transmitted to the tip of an attached ski. The more resistance, the more force seems to be transmitted. For this reason, it seems difficult to illustrate the forces as vector arrows in a fully realistic way.

Note -- I write ski tip here because "front ski" would not be exact either. At least ski tip is in front of a binding certainly. Further, it seems to even make sense to say that a cable or flexor creates a rotational power because without the piece a rotational force would not be created to a tip of a ski. See free pivot part of the illustration above. It is only one interpretation that word "create" implies a source of energy. Another interpretation could be that create expresses a comparison between two different bindings / systems.
1. The binding, with cable attached, is in tension. This is what creates resistance to boot movement.

2. Whatever mass is transmitted act on the front of the ski. This is because the whole front of the ski (less, perhaps, a bit of the pocket in a cambered ski) is in contact with the ground. The ski is not free to rotate, after all.

3. The mass applied to the front of the ski is the result of pressure provided by the skier’s weight. Nothing else “creates” this mass.

4. The angular distance between the normal force and mass applied by the skier is what creates force.

5. Force is nothing but mass and direction (or vector). This isn’t my definition. This is the accepted definition in physics.

6. Removing one (mass) or the other (vector) results in no force.
We dreamed of riding waves of air, water, snow, and energy for centuries. When the conditions were right, the things we needed to achieve this came into being. Every idea man has ever had up to that point about time and space were changed. And it keeps on changing whenever we dream. Bio mechanical jazz, man.



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GrimSurfer
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Re: Physics debate

Post by GrimSurfer » Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:44 pm

tkarhu wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:10 pm
lowangle al wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 12:44 pm
When you lift the heel it puts tension on the spring, which wants to lighten your tail there by loading the tip. It's simple stone age technology, a lever.
@GrimSurfer What do you say about Al's lever hypothesis?

I think it expresses something meaningful in a simple way, similar to the illustration in my latest message.
Al’s hypothesis does not account for the fact that the cable is in tension. Objects in tension must conform to Newton’s Third Law (equal and opposite force). If they didn’t, they’d be in motion.*

Cables do not move on their own. They require an external force. That force is the skier, whose body has both mass (weight) and vector (momentum) because a skier can move on its own without an external force.**

*Please don’t say that the cable is in motion on its own. It isn’t because it doesn’t possess any energy.

**But a skier doesn’t have an energy source does it? Yes, a skier uses food and oxygen to release chemical and thermal energy, which is changed into mechanical energy by the human body.

***A skier moves by manipulating its mass relative to the force of gravity. It can manipulate its mass as long as it has a source of energy (food and oxygen) to do so.

None of this is revolutionary. The people responsible for the laws of physics, energy, thermodynamics etc. we’re immensely clever people. They thought all this through very carefully. Frustrating as it may seem, they are right. It only seems like their not when folks skip over or ignore what is actually happening.

The cable is not a lever. The only thing that might qualify as a fulcrum is its attachment point to the binding. But that attachment point freely rotates, so there is no leverage.
We dreamed of riding waves of air, water, snow, and energy for centuries. When the conditions were right, the things we needed to achieve this came into being. Every idea man has ever had up to that point about time and space were changed. And it keeps on changing whenever we dream. Bio mechanical jazz, man.



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TallGrass
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Re: Physics debate

Post by TallGrass » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:12 pm

Pictures below!

Terms like "Force", "Energy", and "Power" have specific definitions in Physics, as well as layman usage that is not the same (e.g. "Theory" of gravity is not same as "I have a theory of where I left my car keys). If this helps...
Stephen wrote:
Tue Jan 10, 2023 8:44 pm
STRICTLY speaking, cables to not CREATE force. They do TRANSMIT force, which is what I belive you mean, and is what I UNDERSTAND you to be saying.
Or STORE it under TENSION and even COMPRESSION (think of springs). More below...
GrimSurfer wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 10:00 am
...cables don’t create force. ... Things are still hung up the transmission of force ... [some contend] a cable, attached to itself through a plate (of sorts) can transmit additional force. The cable is in tension. [IF... the] force that it creates in one direction (against the heel) is equal to the force it receives in another (against the cable by the plate) ... the net force is zero.

... differing arcs of the cable-plate and boot-plate creates variable tension throughout a range of motion.
If it helps people, BALANCED FORCES (gravity, active, tension, compression, ... whatever you like to think) result in NO CHANGE of VECTOR (direction and speed) ala momentum -- if stopped it stays stopped, and if moving it continues along its course.

However, UN-BALANCED FORCES result in a change of speed and/or direction.

There are also different Frames of Reference if you will, in that the skier can remain fixed, immobile like a statue, yet acted upon by the skis (via bindings, etc.) hitting a bump. A CLUSTER of things (skier-binding-ski) can remain in balance within that group, yet change their interface with the slope/snow to effect a change in speed and/or direction.
DG99 wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:36 am
I’m a biologist. And a telemark skier at times. Definitely will say that the the cable creates force that pressures the tip of the ski! So to speak!!!. :lol:
"Creates" or "stores" force? Think of a spring. Lying on the counter it does not just expand nor contract on its own. However, if a force acts on it (Active Force from a human's muscle), and then contained by a metal casing of sort (wall of which are under Tension, equal in measure to the spring's Compression) and the only way for the spring to apply "force" is for the Tension to fail or be released, and in turn the spring can release it's stored energy (potential --> kinetic) which will not exceed that which the human's muscle imparted, less when losses due to things like heat and friction are accounted for.

As for "cable ... pressures the tip", I'd lean more toward something like "spring force (potential energy) acting through a pivot to exert force tangent to the pivot (rubber bumper thingie) through a lever (ski) where it makes contact (snow) with an opposing force (Earth) ..." and "if the cable is not a radius of the pivot or connects off-center of it, a 'triangle of forces' may or may not be 'in balance'."
GrimSurfer wrote:*Please don’t say that the cable is in motion on its own. It isn’t because it doesn’t possess any energy.
It can 'store' it -- Potential Energy, similar to flywheels, etc.


An issue I see is...
... the term "force" is being used when there are different kinds, just as there are different "vehicles", so a lack of clarity leads to ambiguity, confusion, and conflict, same as if one person's "vehicle" is a car, the next one's is a truck, a third is thinking motorcycle, fourth a submarine, etc.

So... for expediency I'm going to lift from this page for the following...

Contact Forces
Frictional Force: the force exerted by a surface as an object moves across it or makes an effort to move across it (e.g. sliding friction, static friction, rolling friction, fluid friction, air see below, ...)
Normal Force: the support force exerted upon an object that is in contact with another stable object, Fnorm
Air Resistance Force: a special type of frictional force that acts upon objects as they travel through the air
Applied Force: applied to an object by a person or another object, Fapp
Tension Force: the force that is transmitted through a string, rope, cable or wire when it is pulled tight by forces acting from opposite ends
Spring Force: the force exerted by a compressed or stretched spring upon any object that is attached to it [I prefer to just use the terms Tension <- -> and Compression -> <- as a spring can do either]
(Khan Acadamy has a tutorial on "What is tension?" including some free body diagrams.)

Action-at-a-Distance Forces
Gravitational Force: the earth, moon, or other massively large object attracts another object towards itself, Fgrav = m*g, "weight*
Electrical Force: [see next]
Magnetic Force: [look up Electro-Magnetic force sometime, and be happy there isn't a thread about it here... yet]
[You may have also heard of Weak and Strong forces with regard to atoms, and that's a level I think we can skirt here]

Example: An airplane in steady flight has four Forces in balance...
Gravitational Force pulling it DOWN -- in balance with -- Lift (resultant force from different air pressures above/below wing due to different speeds of air over wing) pushing it UP
and
Thrust (similar to Lift ala pressure, but via various methods) pulling it FORWARD -- in balance with -- Drag (Air Resistance Force) pulling it it BACKWARD

Image
This article points out some incorrectly illustrate as all FOUR being equal, when in fact it is opposed pairs*.
This may seem trivial until one realizes changing your speed, while it affects LIFT , does NOT change GRAVITY.
This is key for pilots as they have to adjust lift via wing controls flaps and surfaces to maintain level flight when "speed" changes.
* It's also possible for three or more forces in opposition to be balanced, and we haven't even gotten past two- to three-dimensions!
Image

Diagrams get more complex when an airplane climbs or dives (much less "turns") with this one showing Center of Gravity and Center of Lift ...
Image

And then there's Energy's relationship with Force(s)...
Energy can be (as well as change between)...
Potential*: stored
Kinetic*: moving, movement, momentum, ...

Thermal: heat
Electrical: pet your cat backwards sometime
Chemical: ala gasoline
Nuclear: this thread?
(* the two most pertinent to this thread, IMO)

Same event, different points in time. (Can you spot the skier?)
Image

Image
I get the gist here, yet there's something in the color consistence, arc depictions, and forces (as in if in a Free Body Diagram ... FBD) I rub my chin over, part of which is their isolation from the ski and ground which play a part, part is the variety of cable routings leading to more than one fulcrum being involved in a FBD with varying locations creating different levers-within-levers, but I've wrote enough as is.

There was a cool short video of an anchor bolt in a block of glass/plastic that when tension was applied to the bolt, the block appeared unchanged. However, when redone with light passing through the block, one could see the distortions in the light pattern passing through to a wall made by the tension -- evidence of an "equal and opposite" reaction, usually un-observable to the human eye.

Courtesy mention @lowangle al @tkarhu @TheMusher @wabene @lilcliffy as recent contributors for a general FYI/FWIW.
Last edited by TallGrass on Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:56 pm, edited 4 times in total.



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tkarhu
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Re: Physics debate

Post by tkarhu » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:18 pm

@GrimSurfer Well ok, everybody has their right to free thinking and personal beliefs. However, others have pointed out that there is a practical difference between a free pivot binding (where binding side attachment plate rotates) and a cable / flexor binding, when skiing.

Physics is empirical science, induction not deduction, so when forming hypotheses, I would take such practical experience into account. Of course everyday understanding might prove inaccurate. But @verskis measurements do not really support the mere weight shifting hypothesis either. So I would trust observations more here than thoughts.

So I guess better not try to find a consensus. Hope that my previous page illustration depicts how most skiers see it here. Hope others find it easier to understand than lengthy descriptions of same thing.



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Re: Physics debate

Post by Stephen » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:20 pm

I haven’t caught up with the last 3 pages of this, but have to say that where a lot of this is getting hung up is that people (except one) are saying that the:
Cable creates force.

We all know what this means, even though we also know, if we stop to think of it, that the cable, itself, does not creat force, it transmits force or energy.

So, if you all (minus 1) will correct yourselves, and stop saying CREATES, when what you mean is TRANSMITS, maybe we can move on.
:lol:



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Stephen
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Re: Physics debate

Post by Stephen » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:28 pm

GrimSurfer wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 10:00 am
This is why cables can’t create force, which is something @Stephen now understands.
In your dreams.



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Stephen
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Re: Physics debate

Post by Stephen » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:29 pm

lowangle al wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 12:28 pm
I'm sure I know how a cable binding works and how it relates to tip pressure. I know how to apply that tip pressure to my skiing. I don't need to know anything else, no additional info will change my skiing.
For the love of god, stop defending.
It’s pointless.



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Stephen
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Re: Physics debate

Post by Stephen » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:41 pm

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Re: Physics debate

Post by lowangle al » Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:48 pm

Stephen wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:29 pm
lowangle al wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 12:28 pm
I'm sure I know how a cable binding works and how it relates to tip pressure. I know how to apply that tip pressure to my skiing. I don't need to know anything else, no additional info will change my skiing.
For the love of god, stop defending.
It’s pointless.

Why not defend what is right?

Why anyone would listen to a guy who never used a cable binding in his life to find out what they do. “ heel control” that’s what he came up with. You can’t learn to ski by applying incorrect science.



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