A water pump is typically a third-class lever, where the effort force is between the fulcrum and the load. The handle or lever is used to apply force to move the load (water) from a lower to a higher level.
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A hand pump is a class 2 lever because the input force is applied in the middle (load at one end, fulcrum at the other) to lift water from a lower level to a higher level.
It would be a lever class one lever as the fulcrum is in the middle
Yes, a foot pump is a third class lever. The effort is applied between the load and the fulcrum.
A cast iron hand water pump works by manually pumping a lever up and down. This action creates a vacuum within the pump, pulling water up through a pipe from a well or other water source. The water is then pushed out through a spout when the lever is pushed down.
A boring pump is an example of a second-class lever, where the load is situated between the effort (input force) and the fulcrum. The fulcrum is on one end, the effort is applied on the other end, and the load is in the middle.