jvian
Aerospace
- Aug 13, 2009
- 119
I have recently had some vibe and shock testing performed by a local test house and have ran into a question of test tolerance and the likelihood of over-test/under-test. Up to this point my experience deals with random vibration testing and classical sawtooth impulse shock testing; however, this round of testing utilized a shock response spectrum (SRS) which is new to me.
I feel comfortable with the concept of the SRS in general and have some (though limited via my own research) understanding of its derivation and also per MIL-STD-810G feel comfortable with the testing process. First input a reference SRS, this derives the reference transient time domain pulse, followed by the "actual applied" transient pulse via the shaker table, and finished with the "actual applied" resultant SRS (synthesized from the "actual applied" transient pulse).
When performing the test the technician was forced to widen the tolerance band of the reference SRS (from +/-3dB to +/- 6dB) to allow the shaker table to converge on a transient impulse. My requirement was to be within the +/- 3 dB band however if increasing to +/- 6 dB helped while not under-testing the unit, I would accept the results as a pass as well (with some robustness to over-test). However when the test was complete we never received any charts or data (nor can i get that data at this point) on the "actual applied" SRS and therefore have now way of knowing whether or not we over-tested or under-tested our unit by widening the tolerance band. In my experience (~3 years) with the dynamic world of shock and vibration every example or test has always resulted in either a "within limits" satisfied test, or an "acceptable over-test" condition due to dynamic amplification. I have never seen a system attenuate an input.
My hope is that someone here may be able to provide some insight as to the likelihood of my test being an over-test or an under-test. I have since passed a more severe crash safety shock and am confident the design is acceptable but would like to run this to ground for my own benefit and to widen my experience if possible. Had I not performed additional and more severe testing I feel an experienced "judgement" call would have been required.
Any help or insight would be appreciated and thanks in advance.
-J-
I feel comfortable with the concept of the SRS in general and have some (though limited via my own research) understanding of its derivation and also per MIL-STD-810G feel comfortable with the testing process. First input a reference SRS, this derives the reference transient time domain pulse, followed by the "actual applied" transient pulse via the shaker table, and finished with the "actual applied" resultant SRS (synthesized from the "actual applied" transient pulse).
When performing the test the technician was forced to widen the tolerance band of the reference SRS (from +/-3dB to +/- 6dB) to allow the shaker table to converge on a transient impulse. My requirement was to be within the +/- 3 dB band however if increasing to +/- 6 dB helped while not under-testing the unit, I would accept the results as a pass as well (with some robustness to over-test). However when the test was complete we never received any charts or data (nor can i get that data at this point) on the "actual applied" SRS and therefore have now way of knowing whether or not we over-tested or under-tested our unit by widening the tolerance band. In my experience (~3 years) with the dynamic world of shock and vibration every example or test has always resulted in either a "within limits" satisfied test, or an "acceptable over-test" condition due to dynamic amplification. I have never seen a system attenuate an input.
My hope is that someone here may be able to provide some insight as to the likelihood of my test being an over-test or an under-test. I have since passed a more severe crash safety shock and am confident the design is acceptable but would like to run this to ground for my own benefit and to widen my experience if possible. Had I not performed additional and more severe testing I feel an experienced "judgement" call would have been required.
Any help or insight would be appreciated and thanks in advance.
-J-