rofloligist
Mechanical
- Jul 18, 2013
- 11
I am trying to design a bolted flange connection for an oddly shaped piece. There are 4 flanges that connect the piece to the ground, with the flanges being welded to the ground. Each flange has 2 bolts. What I have done is taken the load, divided it by the number of fasteners and applied the load as a shear force at each bolt. This leaves the secondary shear due to moment loads.
As this force is not acting along a line of symmetry with the fasteners, this is a case of eccentric loading. My understanding is that you take the shear load experienced by each flange (so Fshear_flange=F/4) and place it between the 2 bolts on each flange. Then you take the equivalent moment this Fshear_flange would create if it was acting at the location of F. This means you get 2 moments at the centroid of each of the bolt groups on each of the flanges. One moment is Mh=H*Fshear_flange and the other is Mw=(W/2)*Fshear_flange.
After you get these moments and loads, you distribute the Fshear_flange to the 2 bolts so Fshear_bolt1=Fshear_flange/2. Then you get an additional shear load, Fshear_bolt2, from the moment created by Mh. Fshear_bolt2 = Mh*(distance from center of bolt group to bolt). You then add these 2 components via Pythagorean theorem and get your resulting Fshear_bolt. The other moment, Mw, creates a tension in one bolt and compression on the other bolt on that flange. This tension/compression is equal to Mw*distance from center of bolt group to bolt.
I am just wondering if my initial shear vector is placed properly, between each of the 2 bolts, and I am taking the correct moments. Should the moments be taken about the center of each of the 4 flanges? Or should the moments be taken about centroid of the whole connection, IE midway between 2 and 4 and in the same plane as the bolts.
If this is too confusing let me know!
Thanks for the help!
As this force is not acting along a line of symmetry with the fasteners, this is a case of eccentric loading. My understanding is that you take the shear load experienced by each flange (so Fshear_flange=F/4) and place it between the 2 bolts on each flange. Then you take the equivalent moment this Fshear_flange would create if it was acting at the location of F. This means you get 2 moments at the centroid of each of the bolt groups on each of the flanges. One moment is Mh=H*Fshear_flange and the other is Mw=(W/2)*Fshear_flange.
After you get these moments and loads, you distribute the Fshear_flange to the 2 bolts so Fshear_bolt1=Fshear_flange/2. Then you get an additional shear load, Fshear_bolt2, from the moment created by Mh. Fshear_bolt2 = Mh*(distance from center of bolt group to bolt). You then add these 2 components via Pythagorean theorem and get your resulting Fshear_bolt. The other moment, Mw, creates a tension in one bolt and compression on the other bolt on that flange. This tension/compression is equal to Mw*distance from center of bolt group to bolt.
I am just wondering if my initial shear vector is placed properly, between each of the 2 bolts, and I am taking the correct moments. Should the moments be taken about the center of each of the 4 flanges? Or should the moments be taken about centroid of the whole connection, IE midway between 2 and 4 and in the same plane as the bolts.
If this is too confusing let me know!
Thanks for the help!