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List five simple machines that you or someone in your family uses to help make work easier around the house.

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List five simple machines that you or someone in your family uses to help make work easier around the house. Objectives. Differentiate between the six simple machines. (SPI 0707.11.1) Determine the amount of force needed to do work using different simple machines. (SPI 0707.11.2). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Objectives

List five simple machines that you or someone in your family uses to help make work easier around the house.

Page 2: Objectives

Objectives Differentiate between the six

simple machines. (SPI 0707.11.1)

Determine the amount of force needed to do work using different simple machines. (SPI 0707.11.2)

Page 3: Objectives

1. Complete the 2-square vocabulary activity in your scientist notebook with your group. Do the “yours” side for the 12 bell work words/phrases.

2. Complete the scenarios with your group. Write the explanations on your next blank page in your scientist notebook.

3. When you are finished, raise your hands and I will check your work.

Work hard, smart, and QUICKLY!!!

2-Square Vocabulary

Page 4: Objectives

Machine YOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A machine is a device that makes work easier by changing the size or direction of a force.

Examples: wheelchair, scissors, chopsticks

Page 5: Objectives

Simple MachinesYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A machine or simple device without moving parts.

Examples: lever, pulley, wheel & axle, inclined plane, wedge, screw

Page 6: Objectives

Work YOURS: TEXTBOOK:

Work is the transfer of energy to an object by using a force that causes the object to move in the direction of the force.

Work is done on an object if two things happen: 1) the object moves as a force is applied, 2) the direction of the object’s motion is the same as the direction of the force.

Examples: pushing a ball up a hill

Page 7: Objectives

Work or Not Work?OR ORYES NO YES NO

Page 8: Objectives

ForceYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A push or a pull exerted on an object in order to change the motion of the object; force has size and direction.

Examples: people, bulldozer, static electricity

Page 9: Objectives

Work Input/Work Output

YOURS: TEXTBOOK: Work input is the

work done on the machine.

Work output is the work done by the machine.

Examples: opening a paint can

Page 10: Objectives

LeverYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A lever is a simple machine that has a bar that pivots at a fixed point, called a fulcrum.

Examples: first-class lever (see saw), second-class lever (wheelbarrow or soda bottle opener), third-class lever (lifting weights or hammering a nail)

Page 11: Objectives

Three Classes of LeversFirst-Class Lever Second-Class Lever Third-Class Lever

Elementary School Middle School High School

Page 12: Objectives

Which of the following correctly explains why one of the above levers can lift the object with less effort force? A. Lever X will require less effort force because its fulcrum is closer

to the object than lever Y's fulcrum.B. Lever Y is a third-class lever and will require less effort force than

lever X, which is a second-class lever.C. Lever X is a third-class lever and will require less effort force than

lever Y, which is a second-class lever.D. Lever Y will require less effort force because its fulcrum is closer

to the input force than lever X's fulcrum.

Levers

Page 13: Objectives

PulleyYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A simple machine that has a grooved wheel that holds a rope or a cable.

Examples: fixed, moveable, block and tackle

Page 14: Objectives

The pulley changes the direction of the force. Elevators make use of fixed pulleys.

Movable pulleys do increase force, but they also increase the distance over which the input force must be exerted.

A fixed pulley and a movable pulley are used together; the mechanical advantage of a block and tackle depends on the number of rope segments.

Page 15: Objectives

Which of the pulley systems shown below will lift the weight using the least amount of effort force?

Pulleys

Page 16: Objectives

Wheel & AxleYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A simple machine consisting of two circular objects of different sizes.

Examples: car’s wheel & axle, faucet

Page 17: Objectives

Effort force applied to a wheel is ____________ when it is transferred to the axle because the axle travels a

___________ distance than the wheel.

A. multiplied, longer B. divided, longer C. multiplied, shorter D. divided, shorter

Wheel & Axle

Page 18: Objectives

Inclined PlaneYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A simple machine that is a straight, slanted surface; a ramp.

Examples: ramp or slide

Page 19: Objectives

Tom wants to put a heavy box into the back of a moving truck. He is not strong enough to lift the box into the truck, so he uses a ramp to slide it up instead. The ramp is as an inclined plane that A. increases both the force needed to move the box and the distance

over which the force is applied.B. increases the force needed to move the box while decreasing the

distance over which the force is applied.C. decreases both the force needed to move the box and the distance

over which the force is applied.D. decreases the force needed to move the box while increasing the

distance over which the force is applied.

Inclined Plane

Page 20: Objectives

WedgeYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A simple machine that is made up of two inclined planes and that moves; often used for cutting.

Examples: knife, axe, door stop

Page 21: Objectives

Select the choice that best completes the following sentence. When an axe is used to chop wood,

A. the axe blade acts as a wedge and changes the direction of the input force.B. the axe blade acts as a wedge and does not change the direction of the input

force.C. the axe blade acts as a lever and does not change the direction of the input force.D. the axe blade acts as a lever and changes the direction of the input force.

Wedge

Page 22: Objectives

Screw YOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A simple machine that consists of an inclined plane wrapped around a cylinder.

Examples: screw, light bulb

Page 23: Objectives

Which of the screws below requires the least amount of effort force to turn?

W. X. Z.Y.

Screws

Page 24: Objectives

Compound MachineYOURS: TEXTBOOK:

A machine made up of more than one simple machine.

Examples: manual can opener

Page 25: Objectives

YOURS: TEXTBOOK: A machine’s

mechanical advantage is the number of times the machine multiplies force; how much easier it is to do the work using that specific machine.

Examples:

Mechanical Advantage

It is 10 times easier to use a ramp to move a heavy object.

Page 26: Objectives

Write the question & answer.

Page 27: Objectives
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Page 30: Objectives

Fill out the chart as we go through the Simple Machines activity on the Edheads website.

Page 31: Objectives

3-2-1 Reflection

3 simple machines and their functions

2 differences between simple and compound machines

1 word problem to use with the formula W=F x d