Take a look at the part of the deck between the 2 towers. The weight of the deck and the people and buses- all this pulls on the cables, which pull on the towers. To balance this pull- and negate the pull on the towers, there’s an identical set of cables pulling on the towers on the opposite side.
In recent years, engineers have come up with a new design—a single tower bridge.
Santiago Calatrava, a famous Spanish engineer, went a step farther and eliminated the back stays altogether.
Which brings us to our cable stayed model.
The tower doesn’t weigh enough to balance the weight of the deck, so we hung a “skip” from the top of the tower and put a 4.7 pound brick in. This is enough ctwt. to balance a load ( 1 brick) placed half way along the deck.
Mateo explains it below.
So if we want to put a heavier load on the deck, and we don’t have any more bricks to increase the counter-weight- what would happen if we increase the distance from the pivot point to the ctwt.?
Increase that distance and we increase the Moment. Mateo added 2 wood extensions- bolted to the back of the tower and suspended from the tower, and hung the “skip” . So now we have the same ct.wt. (1 brick), but it’s farther away from the fulcrum, so we’ve increased the Moment.