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10 October, 06:08

Sometimes, even with a wrench, one cannot loosen a nut that is frozen tightly to a bolt. It is often possible to loosen the nut by slipping one end of a long pipe over the wrench handle and pushing at the other end of the pipe. With the aid of the pipe, does the applied force produce a smaller torque, a greater torque, or the same torque on the nut?

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  1. 10 October, 06:36
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    Torque is defined as the product of force and the perpendicular distance from the application of force.

    It is a vector quantity.

    Torque = force x perpendicular distance

    To loosen a nut, if we increase the amount of distance, the torque is increased by applying a little amount of force and hence it is easy to open the nut.

    Thus, it is easy to open a nut by slipping one end of a long pipe over the wrench handle and pushing at the other end of the pipe so that the torque is more and the nut is loosen.
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