Mechanical Engineering - Strength of Materials - Discussion
Discussion Forum : Strength of Materials - Section 5 (Q.No. 45)
45.
When the shear force diagram between any two points is an inclined straight line, it indicates that there is a uniformly varying load between the two points.
Discussion:
15 comments Page 1 of 2.
Arun said:
4 years ago
NO. If its inclined straight line, then the load is Uniformly distrubuted load and if its parabolic, then the load is Uniformly varying load.
(3)
Vikash said:
5 years ago
Udl will be the right answer.
(1)
Tarik said:
5 years ago
Answer should be No.
(1)
MANAS KUMAR MAJHI said:
5 years ago
Uniform Distributed Load.
Harshdeepsinh said:
6 years ago
SFD is given as an inclined straight line that doesn't mean it's a UVL. If load distribution is given as an inclined straight line then we can say that it's UVL.
Sridhar said:
6 years ago
Simply supported and cantilever beam the uniformly varying load for shear force diagram is parabolic curve only so the answer is a parabolic curve.
Omkar said:
6 years ago
Please explain the right answer.
Joyi said:
8 years ago
sfd for the udl-inclined straight line.
sfd for uvl-parabolic.
sfd for uvl-parabolic.
Sohel said:
8 years ago
SF Diagram :: Point Load - Straight Line
UDL - Inclined Line
UVL - Parabolic Line
BM Diagram :: Point Load - Inclined Line
UDL - Parabolic Line
UVL - Hyperbolic/Cubic Line
UDL - Inclined Line
UVL - Parabolic Line
BM Diagram :: Point Load - Inclined Line
UDL - Parabolic Line
UVL - Hyperbolic/Cubic Line
(3)
Sandas said:
8 years ago
It's parabolic.
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