I have exams after a few days and I'm doing all I can to understand the concept of resolving forces. With hard luck and a few hours of devotion, I acquired basic knowledge on Resolving Forces and was able to solve almost all questions and then this one came out.
A car of mass 850 kg is travelling, with acceleration 0.3m(s^-2) up a straight road inclined 12 degrees to the horizontal. There is a force resisting the motion of 250 N. Calculate the magnitude of the driving force.
Please help me out on this one. I'm really confused.
Plus, if you have great resources that can help a layman understand Resolving Forces to its depth, please add them too.
Thanks in Advance
If that was actually the way the question was asked? I don't see that the angle is at all relevant- you are told that there is "a force resisting the motion 250 N". Since "F= ma", if the 850 kg car is has 0.3 m/s^2 acceleration, the net force on the car is (850)(0.3)= 255 N. The "driving force" must be that plus the 250 N resisting force it must overcome to move at all,