It's important to firmly
attach the meter sticks to the carts. I wedged small blocks
of scrapwood into the top of the carts and then screwed the
meter sticks to the blocks of wood. Place the tracks at right
angles and put the carts (with meter sticks attached) on the
tracks. The relative motion of the carts will provide motion
of the cardboard box as the meter sticks slide over each
other. Support the far end of
the meter sticks any way you can with some kind of low
friction sliding bearing. I used plastic meter sticks with
paper clips taped to the underside of the wooden meter
sticks. Tape some chart paper to
the table below the area where the meter sticks cross.
Attach a marker to the cardboard box. A small paper tube in
which the marker can slide up and down as it "floats" on the
paper is effective. Shown at right are three
of the five pulleys used. The other two pulleys are at the
far ends of the two tracks. In my setup, it was
convenient to clamp a board to the corner of the table to
provide room for the three smart pulleys. Place the pulleys on each
end of the tracks and attach strings to each end of the
carts which run over the pulleys. Hang masses on the pulleys
in front of the carts to provide motive force. Hang small
masses on the smart pulleys behind the carts to provide
tension. Attach a string between
the box and the resultant vector pulley. Important:
Underneath the crossed meter sticks is a small block of wood
with a screw-eye. The string between the box and the
resultant vector pulley passes through this eye, ensuring
that the measurement of displacement of the resultant vector
is from the origin (and keeping the string on the
pulley). The block of wood in
front of each cart is there to provide friction to slow the
motion of the cart. Vary the friction by placing masses on
these blocks or adjusting the masses hanging over the
pulleys at the far end o f the cart. The two large masses
shown on these blocks are there to hold the carts in place
between runs. As the carts roll, the
box is pushed by the two meter sticks, and its motion is the
resultant of the motions of the "x" meter stick and the "y"
meter stick. One can very the
magnitude and type of motion (constant velocity,
accelerating) of the two carts to provide different motions
of the box. Toward the lower right is
a pretty good view of my arrangement for holding the
marker.