I have to model the brake system of a 12 ton traler with two axles, and to do it I need the the axle inertia moment along the its rotational axis. Does anyone have a reasonable guess of it?
unfortunately I don't have the axle and rims at my workplace and manunfactures don't claim their masses. I thought to assume the axle as a beam with two circular plates, but I don't have the weight of both of them.
I'm not a student, unfortunately . I have to design a brake system and the controller for a trailer to reproduce a specific trailer dynamics. To model the wheel dynamics I need the axle inertia moment. I don't work for a trailer manunfacturer.
If the analysis is for a brake system, it seems you'd want the total inertia as seen by the axle which would include the 12 ton truck mass converted into a rotational inertia along the axis. Much higher than just the inertia of the axle alone.
you're right, infact on Limpert book it is written that approx the 5% of the total inertia is due to the rotational components. In case of a traler it's even lower.