How do you make a portable weighing scale using Hooke’s Law?
Question : How do you make a portable weighing scale using Hooke’s Law?
portable scale
Best answer:
Answer by Bekki B
If you have a spring of known k, just hang it on something and mark the equilibrium point.
Put a weight on there.
Measure the change in length from equilibrium. Call that x.
F = kx is your weight. Nifty!
Edit: If you don’t know k, you’ll need a known weight of some sort to calibrate your scale.
Bekki is on the right track and eyeonthescreen is good too.
First compute k as was specified
k=F/x
k- spring constant
F = W=mg
m – known mass (in kg)
g – acceleration due to gravity (9.81m/s^2
Then you can make a scale such as per certain amount of mass it elongated a certain length
Let say you placed a 2 kg mass and the spring elongated 1 cm
k = 2 (9.81)/.01=1962 N/m (that is the scientific way)
or better yet mark .5 cm fro every kilogram.( he-he) that is the easiest way.
Sorry almost forgot; if you are looking for a portable scale you mast use a portable spring.