It’s starting to dawn on some people that cables don’t create force. This represents progress… if only in one more person than it did yesterday.Stephen wrote: ↑Tue Jan 10, 2023 8:44 pmSTRICTLY speaking, cables to not CREATE force.lowangle al wrote: ↑Tue Jan 10, 2023 6:08 pmIf Isaac Newton skied, he'd be telling you that cables create force. He'd probably wonder if you were dropped on your head.
This is where we have been hung up all along.
They do TRANSMIT force, which is what I belive you mean, and is what I UNDERSTAND you to be saying.
If I have that wrong, please feel free to flame me!!!!
Things are still hung up the transmission of force because people haven’t been able to shake themselves of the opinion that a cable, attached to itself through a plate (of sorts) can transmit additional force. The cable is in tension. The force that it creates in one direction (against the heel) is equal to the force it receives in another (against the cable by the plate). So the net force is zero.
This is why cables can’t create force, which is something @Stephen now understands.
The tension of the cable is resisted by the boot. The differing arcs of the cable-plate and boot-plate creates variable tension throughout a range of motion.
The amount of force that the skier is able to provide by moving their mass doesn’t change. Merely the response. The only thing the cable does, therefore, is facilitate control. It doesn’t provide any force because it doesn’t create it.
You can’t give that which you do not have. This is a very elementary way of stating the problem. But it might get people over the hump reconciling tension and the application of a net force, which are two different things altogether.