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You are just adding to your own confusion and helping nobody. Force x moment arm = torque. What's the problem?
Which part of my post is confusing to you?
Quote from: alancalverd on 17/08/2024 14:13:52Now it is obvious that the tightening torque at any point equals the elastic energy in the ring. What is the ratio between them?
Now it is obvious that the tightening torque at any point equals the elastic energy in the ring.
1:1, thanks to the principle of conservation of energy.
In Newton meter, how do we know that the distance is perpendicular instead of parallel to the force?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 19/08/2024 23:20:26In Newton meter, how do we know that the distance is perpendicular instead of parallel to the force?Because we say "the applied torque was X Nm" or "the energy expended was Y joules" depending on what we mean.
Your post above clearly shows your confusion. Even if I end up fail to help you, I still hope I can prevent someone else from making a similar mistake.
how do we know that the distance is perpendicular instead of parallel to the force?
Joule per radian contains no information about direction,
does not tell you how hard to pull on the wrench,
would include all the irrelevant frictional losses up to the point where the tightening torque is what matters.
How do you measure it on a torque wrench?
You can just read the display, if you use electronic torque wrench.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 20/08/2024 23:02:28You can just read the display, if you use electronic torque wrench.I haven't seem a torque wrench that integrates τθ, nor one that measures θ.
But not the rotation of the object being torqued. And a click wrench doesn't indicate any angle at all.
No. It indicates that the applied torque has exceeded the threshold, at which point the angle increases with no further increase in torque.
the angle between the head and the handle