Simple Machines Why do boats have all these ropes and pulleys? Module 4: Chapters 2-4 Grade Level Middle School Subject Areas Physical Science, Boat Rigging, Knots Duration Preparation time: 20 minutes Lesson Time: 1 hour 40 minutes Part I: 10 minutes Part II: 30 minutes Part III: 30 minutes Part IV: 60 minutes Setting Indoor/Outdoor/On the water Skills Vocabulary Block, halyard, pulley, compound pulley, fixed pulley, movable pulley, simple machines, inclined plane, screw, wedge, wheel and axle, lever, force, work, load. Summary Background Knowledge Students identify and explore the six simple machines. They will identify compound, fixed, and moveable pulleys on the sailboat and test the benefits of 1:1 vs. 3:1 purchase systems. Simple Machines are used on sailboats to reduce the amount of work needed by the sailor and help us move things. There are six simple machines; the most common simple machine found on a sailboat is a pulley. Sailors call pulleys blocks. Objectives Students will: Describe the six simple machines and their application to the sport of sailing. Identify the difference between fixed and movable pulleys. Create compound pulleys Apply the mechanical advantage of a pulley when raising and or trimming sail. Understand the net effect of multiple forces on the position, speed, and direction of the motion of a sailboat. Materials Learn sailing Right! Beginner Chapters 2-4. Student Sheet Module 3:1 Scavenger Hunt Sheets (1 per group) Student Sheet Module 3:2 Rigging (1 per person) One de-rigged instructional boat. One de-rigged boat per group for pulley (block) identification, rigging and sailing Clipboards (1 per group) Procedure Part I (Outdoor Classroom) 10 minutes Pre-reading: Assign Chapters 2-4 in Learn Sailing Right! Beginner before today’s class (not imperative). 1. Before teaching students how to rig a sailboat, take the students out to the boatyard. Have students gather around an unrigged sailboat. Tell students that sailboats can have very simple or very complex rigging, but they all use the same concepts. You have already learned how sailboats are powered by wind, now we are going to learn how to harness the wind by maximizing the mechanical advantage available to us. 2. Ask students to name a few parts of the boat. (Bow, Stern, Port, Starboard) Remind students that sometimes sailors use a nomenclature or vocabulary. 3. Ask students, “What is this?” (point to a pulley) “Does any one know what sailors call these?” (Blocks) “Do you see any other pulleys on the boat? Where?” Ask students, Why do sailboats have so many pulleys? What job does a pulley do?” 3. Tell students today we are going to learn how sailors decrease their work by using simple machines. 4. Ask students to identify areas of the sailboat where hard work is being done. (Raising sails, trimming sails, steering). Ask students how simple machines are used to reduce the amount of work. 5. This is a great time to teach students how to rig a boat using simple machines to reduce the amount of work. Show students the pulley in the top of the mast that helps raise the main sail. Explain each pulley as you rig. Part II (Outdoors or Indoors) Simple Machine Scavenger Hunt 30 minutes 1. Review the six simple machines this can be done by a teacher in class prior to the day at the sailing center. Pulley: Flag pole, Screw: jar lid Wheel and Axel: Car Wedge: door stoppers Inclined Plane: ladder, ramp Lever: stapler and scavenger hunt list. 3. Modification: Assign groups certain areas; classroom, boatyard, or boathouse. 4. After the scavenger hunt, gather all of the students and review their findings. Put the top 3 answers for each simple machine on the board. Suggestion: have teams switch papers and check off the answers as they are given. Give the winning team some sort of prize or benefit. Part III (Classroom/ Outdoor) 30 minutes Identifying load and effort Sailboats have a lot of pulleys. Today we are going to discuss fixed, moveable, and compound pulleys. Pulleys are used to reduce the amount of work. Using the diagram of a sailboat identify the load (sail), effort (person raising the sail) and pulley type and location. Explain that moveable pulleys are usually used with fixed pulleys and we refer to this arrangement as a compound pulley system. Fixed Pulleys: top of a boat mast, jib pulley. Moveable Pulleys: (find an example of a moveable pulley) 1. Have students work in groups of two or three per boat to rig a boat and identify the pulley types on board, the load, and the direction of applied force. 2. Using a blank sheet of paper 2. Give students 30 minutes to find have students sketch the rig they as many simple machines on the are using, labeling each pulley system on board. property as possible. Students should work in groups of 3 or 4. Give each group a clipboard, pencil, 3. When students have completed rigging their boats and identified the pulley types on the boats, students can either de-rig or launch. Part IV (On the water) 60 minutes 1. Ask students to identify the load on the main sheet block. Ask students if this load (pressure on the sail) ever changes? How and when does it change? Explain to students that the load in this case is the amount of pressure on the sail caused by the wind and the point of sail. Sailors reduce the amount of work needed in windy conditions by modifying the purchase system which is a compound pulley. 2. While sailing ask students to tack or gybe by grabbing the top of the purchase and changing the sail without using the purchase. Then, ask them to tack using the purchase and ask the about the difference. 3. Have a race with 1:1 purchase boats vs 3:1 purchase or more. Does one sail faster than the other? Does one sailor need to exhort more effort (work) than the other? Which point of sail requires the most work from the skipper? Why? Resources: 1. NEOK-12 –games for kids on the six simple machines 2. Minhsacademy – Video from Bill Nye the Science Guy on Simple Machines Student Sheet Module 3.1 Group Names: __________________________________________________ Simple Machines List Examples 1. Pulley 1. 2. 3. 2. Screw 1. 2. 3. 3. Wheel and Axle 1. 2. 3. 4. Wedge 1. 2. 3. 5. Inclined Plane 1. 2. 3. 6. Lever 1. 2. 3. Student Sheet Module 3.2 Name: ________________________ Date: _________________________ Challenge: First, sketch your sailboat and the location of the pulleys used aboard. Second, label the pulley as fixed, moveable, or compound. Last, label the load and direction of the applied force.
© Copyright 2025 Paperzz