McJe
Structural
- Apr 17, 2009
- 33
I'm calculating an axis for the wheel of a rotator to rotate large and heavy pressure vessels. (up to 500 tons)
Basically, it's nothing more then an axis, supported by 2 bearings, and a large wheel in the center.
The wheel is in fact a custom build part, made by welding 3 circular plates (20mm) on the axis and a strip (40mm thick) is welded on these plates to have the wheel surface.
If I calculate this, I tend to be conservative, for safety reasons:
- The load will be carried by 4 wheels, so I calculate 1/2 of the load weight on 1 wheel.
- I calculate the load as a single force on the center of the axis.
- I assume the axis has to carry the load on it's own.
I know this axis is strong enough to carry the load, and if anything goes wrong (misalignment, wrong usage, ...), it will still be strong enough.
My colleague tells me this is way to conservative, and tells me to include the metal wheel in the moment of inertia calculations. This way, we can reuse an old axis which is thinner.
I know he's right in some way, but I don't like his approach.
In his approach, we have to rely on the strength of the weldings. If a weld breaks, the load is carried directly by the axis, and it will break/deform.
Also, I think I cannot add the wheel this easy to the moment of inertia. The load force is still transfered to the axis by the 3 plates.
My question: can I use my colleagues calculations? Or is it better to have some extra safety?
It's not a safety factor 10 I'm talking about, too much overdesign is also not good.
Jeroen.
Basically, it's nothing more then an axis, supported by 2 bearings, and a large wheel in the center.
The wheel is in fact a custom build part, made by welding 3 circular plates (20mm) on the axis and a strip (40mm thick) is welded on these plates to have the wheel surface.
If I calculate this, I tend to be conservative, for safety reasons:
- The load will be carried by 4 wheels, so I calculate 1/2 of the load weight on 1 wheel.
- I calculate the load as a single force on the center of the axis.
- I assume the axis has to carry the load on it's own.
I know this axis is strong enough to carry the load, and if anything goes wrong (misalignment, wrong usage, ...), it will still be strong enough.
My colleague tells me this is way to conservative, and tells me to include the metal wheel in the moment of inertia calculations. This way, we can reuse an old axis which is thinner.
I know he's right in some way, but I don't like his approach.
In his approach, we have to rely on the strength of the weldings. If a weld breaks, the load is carried directly by the axis, and it will break/deform.
Also, I think I cannot add the wheel this easy to the moment of inertia. The load force is still transfered to the axis by the 3 plates.
My question: can I use my colleagues calculations? Or is it better to have some extra safety?
It's not a safety factor 10 I'm talking about, too much overdesign is also not good.
Jeroen.