flyforever85
New member
- Jun 22, 2010
- 178
Hi all,
thanks for the previous answers!
I have a new proble mand I'm not sure the approach is correct. I have a sandwich panel layed up as follows:
Inconel 625 (E=29700 ksi, yield 66 ksi thickness 0.013 in)
Steel Honeycomb
Inconel 718 (E=29000 ksi, yield 160 ksi thickess 0.010 in)
(I modelled this as a composite - I use Patran and Nastran)
I was asked to find the what would be the thickness of 625 at the bottom (replacing 718) to obtain the same strength.
This was my approach: I calculated the load until I reached yield (3500 lbf). Then, I kept the load constant and I started increasing the thickness of the bottom layer until I reached 66 ksi (yield of 625). In this way though, I got a thickness of 0.3 in! I don't think this is the right approach.
Thoughts??
Thanks!
thanks for the previous answers!
I have a new proble mand I'm not sure the approach is correct. I have a sandwich panel layed up as follows:
Inconel 625 (E=29700 ksi, yield 66 ksi thickness 0.013 in)
Steel Honeycomb
Inconel 718 (E=29000 ksi, yield 160 ksi thickess 0.010 in)
(I modelled this as a composite - I use Patran and Nastran)
I was asked to find the what would be the thickness of 625 at the bottom (replacing 718) to obtain the same strength.
This was my approach: I calculated the load until I reached yield (3500 lbf). Then, I kept the load constant and I started increasing the thickness of the bottom layer until I reached 66 ksi (yield of 625). In this way though, I got a thickness of 0.3 in! I don't think this is the right approach.
Thoughts??
Thanks!