BobBartlett
Materials
- May 29, 2006
- 14
I have a metal on metal dry rolling contact application. An example of what I am talking about is a railroad wheel on a steel rail.
We have built several of these machines over the years, and I have some historical data from them, but I want to know if I am being overly conservative.
I am looking for DEMONSTRATED CRITERIA for design related to fatigue life or wear rate based on (for example)such properties as yield or tensile strength; radius of each member; width of each member, etc...?
I am familiar with the Hertian stress equations, but they give an equivalent stress that I desire to correlate to predicted life.
I suspect that if some sort of fatigue life curve were constructed that I would have "wear" on one end that transitions to "spalling" on the other end.
We have built several of these machines over the years, and I have some historical data from them, but I want to know if I am being overly conservative.
I am looking for DEMONSTRATED CRITERIA for design related to fatigue life or wear rate based on (for example)such properties as yield or tensile strength; radius of each member; width of each member, etc...?
I am familiar with the Hertian stress equations, but they give an equivalent stress that I desire to correlate to predicted life.
I suspect that if some sort of fatigue life curve were constructed that I would have "wear" on one end that transitions to "spalling" on the other end.