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| Question 1047148:  The force needed to keep a car from skidding on a curve varies inversely as the radius of the curve and jointly as the weight of the care and the square of the speed.  It 247-lb of force keeps a 1200-lb car from skidding on a curve of radius 400 ft. at 35 mph, what force would keep the same car from skidding on a curve of radius 850 ft. at 60 mph?
 
 Found 2 solutions by  Alan3354, Boreal:
 Answer by Alan3354(69443)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! The force needed to keep a car from skidding on a curve varies inversely as the radius of the curve and jointly as the weight of the care and the square of the speed. ---
 F = k*(1/r^2)*W*(1/v^2) --- k = a constant, r = radius, v = speed
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 Step 1, solve for k
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 F = k*(1/400^2)*1200*(1/35^2) = 247
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 Solve for k, then use k for the calculations.
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 It 247-lb of force keeps a 1200-lb car from skidding on a curve of radius 400 ft. at 35 mph, what force would keep the same car from skidding on a curve of radius 850 ft. at 60 mph?
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 email via the TY note for help or to check your work.
Answer by Boreal(15235)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! F=k*(1/R)*M*V^2 247=k*(1/400)*1200*35^2; (k can be different if we use ft/sec, but it will still give the same answer at the end)
 247/3675=0.06721
 F=0.06721*(1/850)*1200*60^2
 F=341.59 pounds or 342 pounds.
 Check.  The radius increases by about 2.1 approximately but the speed increases by 1.7^2 or about 2.9 , so this should increase the force by approximately 1.38.  The ratio is 1.38, which confirms it.
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