ColinScowen
Mechanical
- Sep 5, 2005
- 20
Hello everyone, I'm not sure if this is the correct forum for this question or not, but, here goes.
We had a failure recently where one of our armature shafts (small motor for hand held powertool) failed with rotational shear.
In the area of the failure, we have a stress relieving undercut (DIN509-E 0.4 × 0.2)between the thinner part of the shaft, diameter 11.8, where the insulating tube and the laminations are mounted, and the thicker part of the shaft, diameter 22.0 that provides the mounting point for the fan.
In the assembly process, if we get maximum material condition on the length of the insulating tube, and a minimum material condition on the dimension between the shoulder and the end of the shaft, we have the situation where the tube is pressed in to contact with the thicker area of the shaft. This essentially means that the undercut has been covered by the tube.
My question is, if I have that situation in the whole SA, is there still any stress relief happening, or has the connection between the shoulder and the thinner part of the shaft, due to the insulating tube, effectively cancelled any stress relief out?
If you need any further info, please let me know.
Colin.
We had a failure recently where one of our armature shafts (small motor for hand held powertool) failed with rotational shear.
In the area of the failure, we have a stress relieving undercut (DIN509-E 0.4 × 0.2)between the thinner part of the shaft, diameter 11.8, where the insulating tube and the laminations are mounted, and the thicker part of the shaft, diameter 22.0 that provides the mounting point for the fan.
In the assembly process, if we get maximum material condition on the length of the insulating tube, and a minimum material condition on the dimension between the shoulder and the end of the shaft, we have the situation where the tube is pressed in to contact with the thicker area of the shaft. This essentially means that the undercut has been covered by the tube.
My question is, if I have that situation in the whole SA, is there still any stress relief happening, or has the connection between the shoulder and the thinner part of the shaft, due to the insulating tube, effectively cancelled any stress relief out?
If you need any further info, please let me know.
Colin.