Concepts

Simple Machines

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

Basic mechanical devices that change the magnitude or direction of a force, making work easier by trading distance for force.

Key points

  • The six classic simple machines are the lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge, and screw.
  • Mechanical advantage is the ratio of load (output force) to effort (input force); a machine with mechanical advantage greater than one lets a small effort move a large load.
  • A machine does not reduce the total work done; the useful work output is always less than the energy input because some energy is lost to friction, so no machine is 100 percent efficient.
  • Levers are classified into three orders by the relative position of load, effort, and fulcrum: first order (seesaw, scissors), second order (wheelbarrow, nutcracker), and third order (forceps, tongs, human forearm).
  • A single fixed pulley only changes the direction of force (mechanical advantage one), while a system of movable pulleys multiplies the force.

Why it matters for CAPF

Mechanical advantage, the orders of levers, and identifying everyday tools as simple machines are recurring physics facts, and the principle that a machine eases effort without creating energy is a common conceptual question.

Common confusion

A machine makes work easier, not less; you trade a smaller force for a longer distance, so the product (work) stays roughly the same minus friction losses. A single fixed pulley gives no force advantage, only convenience of direction.

One-line recall

Six simple machines (lever, pulley, wheel and axle, inclined plane, wedge, screw) provide mechanical advantage by trading distance for force; total work is conserved and efficiency is always below 100 percent.

concept newtons laws, concept laws of motion applications, concept laws of thermodynamics

Parent note

physics everyday

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