LeviV
Mechanical
- Mar 29, 2015
- 4
I need to calculate the force needed to shear a material with a device consisting of blades attached to the outer diameter of a rotating shaft. This is what I have tried but the result I am getting gives very high torque and power values so I'm forced to select a massive motor to power a fairly little device, which seems like it should not be the case.
Shear area A: 0.0002m^2 (2cm x 1cm)
Material tensile strength tau: 241MPa
Cutter radius r: 0.12m
rpm N: 1500 rpm (157 rad/sec)
F_tensile = tau*A = 48200N
F_shear = F_tensile*0.6 = 28920N (approximately)
Torque = F_shear*r = 3470Nm
Power = Torque*N = 545100W
I would like to take the rpm of the machine, angle of the cutting blade, sharpness of the blade, etc into account to lower the torque and power required because it seems to me that these parameters would affect the force needed for shear. Is there a way to do this?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Shear area A: 0.0002m^2 (2cm x 1cm)
Material tensile strength tau: 241MPa
Cutter radius r: 0.12m
rpm N: 1500 rpm (157 rad/sec)
F_tensile = tau*A = 48200N
F_shear = F_tensile*0.6 = 28920N (approximately)
Torque = F_shear*r = 3470Nm
Power = Torque*N = 545100W
I would like to take the rpm of the machine, angle of the cutting blade, sharpness of the blade, etc into account to lower the torque and power required because it seems to me that these parameters would affect the force needed for shear. Is there a way to do this?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,