Ussuri
Civil/Environmental
- May 7, 2004
- 1,582
I have a puzzle which must have a reason which I am not seeing.
Consider you have a symmetrical angle subject to an applied moment about one geometric axis. You can calculate the bending stresses (using M/S with S calculated with respect to the geometric axis) for each of the stress points on the section.
Now consider the same angle with the applied moment resolved into the principal axis, giving you a biaxial moment. Now if I calculate the bending stresses (again M/S but now with S with respect to the principal axis) I get a stress component for each of the applied moments, which I then sum to give the total.
I had expected the stresses calculated in either method to work out the at the same value. I found they didn't.
Can someone shed some light on this? I am missing something somewhere.
Consider you have a symmetrical angle subject to an applied moment about one geometric axis. You can calculate the bending stresses (using M/S with S calculated with respect to the geometric axis) for each of the stress points on the section.
Now consider the same angle with the applied moment resolved into the principal axis, giving you a biaxial moment. Now if I calculate the bending stresses (again M/S but now with S with respect to the principal axis) I get a stress component for each of the applied moments, which I then sum to give the total.
I had expected the stresses calculated in either method to work out the at the same value. I found they didn't.
Can someone shed some light on this? I am missing something somewhere.