gida2
Structural
- Jul 11, 2003
- 15
I’m trying to design a 20-foot shaft to roll up 100 feet of tarp. The shaft would be simply supported on two pillow block bearings. For a bare bones budget the shaft would be hand cranked (very low use ~ 60-80 rpm’s and used maybe once a day).
For a preliminary design I came up with a (SCH 40) 2.5-inch steel pipe with a 10-inch PVC pipe on the outside. The PVC pipe would be bolted to (QTY-3) 1-inch steel flanges (cut out to reduce weight).
My concern is (based on a fixed-simply supported beam calculation) the pillow block bearings would be taking moment loads of around 730 in-#’s along with a 150 # normal force.
Should I be looking at a different type of support like a loose fit pipe hanger wrapped with Teflon or Delrin? Timken makes a spherical (4 bolted) pillow block bearing which could probably handle these loads but would be too expensive for this application.
Any advice on long shaft design would be appreciated.
For a preliminary design I came up with a (SCH 40) 2.5-inch steel pipe with a 10-inch PVC pipe on the outside. The PVC pipe would be bolted to (QTY-3) 1-inch steel flanges (cut out to reduce weight).
My concern is (based on a fixed-simply supported beam calculation) the pillow block bearings would be taking moment loads of around 730 in-#’s along with a 150 # normal force.
Should I be looking at a different type of support like a loose fit pipe hanger wrapped with Teflon or Delrin? Timken makes a spherical (4 bolted) pillow block bearing which could probably handle these loads but would be too expensive for this application.
Any advice on long shaft design would be appreciated.