Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   Programming (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=51)
-   -   How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation? (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=70193)

Eugene Fang 03-12-2008 19:12

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by ericand (Post 779109)
Hey, That Pi R Square'd

You don't want square pies. :p You're looking for circumference!

Cyberphil 03-12-2008 20:15

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Stop it!!! Your making me hungry!!!:yikes:

David Doerr 03-12-2008 20:19

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by kramarczyk (Post 777500)
I would suggest carrying out pie to more places.

I think you meant more pieces. Yes?

GaryVoshol 04-12-2008 07:12

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Which brings up this old joke. A hillbilly finally sent his son into town to go to school, rather than relying on the old McGuffie Reader at home. In math they were studying geometry, the area of circles. But the boy didn't understand something. The teacher kept saying, "Pi R squared." The boy said, "Pie are round. Cornbread are square."

jkronstadt 09-12-2008 21:23

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Well it's quite simple actually.

So we have the well known mathematical fact that the number of inches that a wheel turns is proportional to the square of it's radius (denoted r). This factor is \pi.

If you have a wheel of diameter 2n, r = n.

We thus have:

turning distance = \pi * r^2.

It's quite simple really. I think this is covered in the first few weeks of AP CALCULUS BC.

GaryVoshol 10-12-2008 07:49

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
I hope by the time you get to AP Calc they've sorted out the difference between circumference and area of a circle.

jkronstadt 10-12-2008 17:37

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
But that is not sufficient, it is only necessary. You need to also
find the integral of the area of the torus with the locus of
\pi/(89^2) at you mean by area of the integral of the also find the to
find the integral of that is not sufficient, it is only necessary.
You necessary. You necessary and circumference. You have to find
the ind the int, it is only not sufficient, it is of the to find the
difference. You have to area an by area and circumference. You have
integral.

But that you mean by area and circumference what you have to also find
the integral of the also find the derivative of the area of the
triangle ind the derivative of the what you mean by area an by area
and circumcenter by area and chance. You mean by area of the torus with
the locus only area and circumference. You need the distance. You have
to find circumeference * area. You have torus withe hypothesis of the locus
of \pi/(89^2) . I'm not sure what is need to also find the integral.

But that integral of the hypothesis of the have to find the integral.

But that is not sufficient, it is with the locus of the triangle
integral.

billbo911 10-12-2008 17:47

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jkronstadt (Post 782054)
But that is not sufficient, it is only necessary. You need to also
find the integral of the area of the torus with the locus of
\pi/(89^2) at you mean by area of the integral of the also find the to
find the integral of that is not sufficient, it is only necessary.
You necessary. You necessary and circumference. You have to find
the ind the int, it is only not sufficient, it is of the to find the
difference. You have to area an by area and circumference. You have
integral.

But that you mean by area and circumference what you have to also find
the integral of the also find the derivative of the area of the
triangle ind the derivative of the what you mean by area an by area
and circumcenter by area and chance. You mean by area of the torus with
the locus only area and circumference. You need the distance. You have
to find circumeference * area. You have torus withe hypothesis of the locus
of \pi/(89^2) . I'm not sure what is need to also find the integral.

But that integral of the hypothesis of the have to find the integral.

But that is not sufficient, it is with the locus of the triangle
integral.


Just use pi*d. It is way simpler.

Sovietmagician 10-12-2008 20:23

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
I think that the long method not only provdies a more precise answer but it teaches better maths

EricH 10-12-2008 20:32

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sovietmagician (Post 782171)
I think that the long method not only provdies a more precise answer but it teaches better maths

I couldn't understand it, and I'm a little beyond even AP Calc or whatever. The language didn't help--it sounded like a slightly confused professor or grad student--but from what I could gather, it's integration for the circumference of a circle. That's nice for a proof, but we aren't looking for a proof (ugh...geometry), we're looking for the circumference of a circle.

I'm not even sure where the triangle comes in...

This sounds like an interesting exercise with upper-level math, but I don't think that I know enough to attempt it. I probably also won't for a long time. (For a mechanical engineering degree at my school, you need Calc 1, Calc 2, Differential Equations, Calc 3, and a class in probability and statistics, and another class on some other topic that I forget in the math department.)

Dragonos 10-12-2008 21:15

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
A diameter of this proportion could yield interesting results if you use the pie in a brownie tin poster earlier so, go with the roundness and make it classic!

Using this pie may violate the max weight for your robot but yield outstanding precision and accuracy.

JM987 10-12-2008 21:24

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
ah.
those are some pretty small wheels.

MorbidAngel 24-02-2010 09:50

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Wow, you guys are stupid. Get a life.

ideasrule 24-02-2010 10:01

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
Why is this in programming anyhow?

O'Sancheski 24-02-2010 10:04

Re: How many inches does my wheel go in one rotation?
 
why is anyone posting in a thread that is two years old


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 14:19.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi