joesm519
Mechanical
- Jul 2, 2008
- 18
There is a reducer box whose output shaft drives a conveyor belt. The outrput shaft is off-center (closer to one of the short sides of the rectanglular face of the reducer box). The other end of the reducer box is supported by a vertical rod that is bolted into the ground. I am doing stress analysis of the reducer housing. The weight of the reducer box is the only load I have in my linear static FEA. I did not include the output shaft torque in my FEA since the shaft is free to rotate. My dilemma is that during startup or when the conveyor belt load varies, the reducer box would jerk a little. I am thinking of accounting for these loads (due to the sudden jerk) in dynamic analysis. When the system jerks does any of the torque come into picture in the static stress analysis? I am thinking that the only way the torque will have an effect on the linear static stress analysis is due to friction in the bearing whereby the torque is converted into a load tangent to the output shaft. please let me know if I am on thr right track or missing something.
Thanks
Thanks