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Technically a portable double inclined plane, a wedge is a simple machine used to separate two objects, or portions of objects, through the application of force, perpendicular to the inclined surfaces, developed by conversion of force applied to the wide end. The mechanical advantage of a wedge depends on the ratio of its length to its thickness. Where a short wedge with a wide angle does the job faster, it requires more force than a long wedge with a smaller angle.

The origin of the wedge is unknown, because it has been in use as early as the stone age.

Examples include axes and nails. Knives and chisels can sometimes be used as wedges, however, they are more fundamentally cutting implements. In some sense, door stop (door wedge) can also be regarded as wedge technically, but its main function is to provide a friction between the door and the ground rather than separating materials.

Mechanics | Tools | Simple machines

Falca | Kile | Keil | Cuña | Kiila | Cuneo (fisica) | Wig | Kile | Zagozda

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Wedge (mechanics)".

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