That depends. Is the rope strong enough to hold the two for an extended period of time? The only other way, besides the rope breaking, and a draw, might be the lack of endurance on one side. Who can last the longest? Or who has the worse grip and lets go first.
Tug McGraw is 6'.
Tug Arundel died on 1912-09-05.
A Tug in a Heavy Sea - 1898 was released on: USA: April 1898
Tugboat Annie Pull U Along Tug At U Hug A Tug See U
A good binder brand would either be case-it, or tug binders
In the game of tug of war, both sides pull the rope. When the force is equal there is a state of equilibrium.
Opposite Forces: An example is of tug 'a war. There are two opposing forces on both sides of the rope, so it does't move.
It would be the same as if one tug of war team was pulling against a tree.
One will eventually relent and lose.
Both sides are pulling the opposite dirrention so acceleration is zero which is equilibrium
No, "tug" is not the past tense of "tag." "Tug" is a separate word that means to pull or drag something with force, while "tag" is a verb used to label or identify something.
Tug of War
Tug of War
Tug of War
Examples: Balanced: Two kids are playing tug of war. They are both exerting 4 Newtons of force. (Balanced forces=0 Newtons) Unbalanced: Two kids are playing tug of war. One kid is exerting 6 Newtons of force, the other is exerting 7 Newtons of force. (Unbalanced forces=1 or more Newtons difference[7N-6N=1N) Just because the forces are balanced, doesn't mean that they have to be less than the unbalanced forces. N=Newton
Tug of war is an example of static forces, that is until someone loses...
tension force , contact force, applied force