KernOily
Petroleum
- Jan 29, 2002
- 711
Guys how would you model the resistance of a ball joint in a pipe stress program? I do not want to use a spring rate/stiffness per se since this will create incorrect reactions due to using a Hooke's Law-type analysis. This particular joint (1-1/2" 1500# ANSI) has a pretty high resistive moment so I need to account for it.
The resistance of a ball joint to rotation appears as a resistive moment in the joint that is analagous to the frictional forces developed under a sliding pipe shoe. The manufacturer refers to this as "flex torque". I am scratching my head to figure this out - surely one of you has been up against this in the past. Just trying not to reinvent the wheel here.
One way that occurred to me was that I could apply a fake concentrated moment equal to the joint's flex torque at the node where the joint is located but that will artificially load the pipe at that node where in fact there is no load. This would give me the correct answer for the expansion and operating load cases but it would not be correct for the sustained and occasional cases. I guess I could remove the fake moment for the sustained case only.
Thanks!
Pete
The resistance of a ball joint to rotation appears as a resistive moment in the joint that is analagous to the frictional forces developed under a sliding pipe shoe. The manufacturer refers to this as "flex torque". I am scratching my head to figure this out - surely one of you has been up against this in the past. Just trying not to reinvent the wheel here.
One way that occurred to me was that I could apply a fake concentrated moment equal to the joint's flex torque at the node where the joint is located but that will artificially load the pipe at that node where in fact there is no load. This would give me the correct answer for the expansion and operating load cases but it would not be correct for the sustained and occasional cases. I guess I could remove the fake moment for the sustained case only.
Thanks!
Pete