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1
- #1
HLai
Automotive
- Sep 25, 2008
- 12
Hello everyone,
I'm in the process of designing a swingarm for a 250 pound motorcycle. The kind of a swingarm is the traditional types found on cruisers. Wikipedia calls it:
Swinging fork - the original version consisting of a pair of parallel pipes holding the rear axle at one end and pivoting at the other. A pair of shock absorbers are mounted just before the rear axle and attached to the frame below the seat rail.
I'm lacking confidence in my FEA and having problems calculating the forces. Two things that I want to FEA on this swingarm are:
-when driving through potholes, I want to make sure that when the suspension travels in bump that it is strong enough.
To analyzed this, I assumed a weight bias of 0.7 and used a magnification factor of 2 for the amount of force that the mounting point of the rear axle will receive. Is 2 a reasonable factor to use for this application? I feel that it is a bit too low but have no idea how to calculate it.
250*0.7*2=350
Anyways, I fixed the pivot point of the swingarm and the two shock mounts on the swing arm. Then I applied the force of 350 on the axle mount.
-when driving through bumps where the tire contact patch is in contact with the road in a non-centered part of the wheel, I want to make sure that the swingarm is stiff enough when it is being twisted.
I modeled the axle in CAD and defined the contact between the axle and the swingarm. I then offset the force of 350 pounds from the middle of the tire by half the tire thickness.
I feel that I should have learned all this in school but I didn't. Thanks to everyone.
I'm in the process of designing a swingarm for a 250 pound motorcycle. The kind of a swingarm is the traditional types found on cruisers. Wikipedia calls it:
Swinging fork - the original version consisting of a pair of parallel pipes holding the rear axle at one end and pivoting at the other. A pair of shock absorbers are mounted just before the rear axle and attached to the frame below the seat rail.
I'm lacking confidence in my FEA and having problems calculating the forces. Two things that I want to FEA on this swingarm are:
-when driving through potholes, I want to make sure that when the suspension travels in bump that it is strong enough.
To analyzed this, I assumed a weight bias of 0.7 and used a magnification factor of 2 for the amount of force that the mounting point of the rear axle will receive. Is 2 a reasonable factor to use for this application? I feel that it is a bit too low but have no idea how to calculate it.
250*0.7*2=350
Anyways, I fixed the pivot point of the swingarm and the two shock mounts on the swing arm. Then I applied the force of 350 on the axle mount.
-when driving through bumps where the tire contact patch is in contact with the road in a non-centered part of the wheel, I want to make sure that the swingarm is stiff enough when it is being twisted.
I modeled the axle in CAD and defined the contact between the axle and the swingarm. I then offset the force of 350 pounds from the middle of the tire by half the tire thickness.
I feel that I should have learned all this in school but I didn't. Thanks to everyone.