Jboronat
Marine/Ocean
- Mar 6, 2011
- 2
I'm trying to engineer a composite carbon boom for a dinghy. This basically behaves like a simply supported beam with a no-centered vertical point load.
I'm setting up a spreadsheet using maximum strains to check the laminate. I've UD plies running on top and bottom of a rectangular profile and Double biax or -/+45 wrap over the whole section to cope with shear on vertical walls and encapsulate the UD.
After some load calculations I get a design vertical force of 4700 N to start with. I've limited strain to 0.6/1.2 % compression/tension respectively for UD carbon and a maximum deflection of the overall beam to 2% of the span.
The long sides are placed vertical and I'm ending with too thin vertical walls and I'm concerned about the dimension proportions h/tw (may be local shear buckling in the profile?).
Please could you advice which book/examples could help me to work on this area?
I'm setting up a spreadsheet using maximum strains to check the laminate. I've UD plies running on top and bottom of a rectangular profile and Double biax or -/+45 wrap over the whole section to cope with shear on vertical walls and encapsulate the UD.
After some load calculations I get a design vertical force of 4700 N to start with. I've limited strain to 0.6/1.2 % compression/tension respectively for UD carbon and a maximum deflection of the overall beam to 2% of the span.
The long sides are placed vertical and I'm ending with too thin vertical walls and I'm concerned about the dimension proportions h/tw (may be local shear buckling in the profile?).
Please could you advice which book/examples could help me to work on this area?