trainguy
Structural
- Apr 26, 2002
- 706
Guys,
I need to design a beam that has a very different ultimate bending strength when loaded downward versus when it is loaded upward. (Actually its downward versus sideways, but I'm simplifying)
Imagining a rectangular tube as a section, if we laser cut a notch in the portion of the section that undergoes compression, and insert a metal plate with an interference fit, and we make sure that the reduced section meets shear, combined stress and fatigue requirements, could this work?
I would be using the "spacer" in bearing, to replace the compressive stress in the section. Under tension from a load in the other direction, the beam would have a much reduced S, or at least that's the hope. Some tack welding would be used to ensure the adjacent parts do not buckle locally when undergoing the primary bending stresses.
What do you think?
tg
I need to design a beam that has a very different ultimate bending strength when loaded downward versus when it is loaded upward. (Actually its downward versus sideways, but I'm simplifying)
Imagining a rectangular tube as a section, if we laser cut a notch in the portion of the section that undergoes compression, and insert a metal plate with an interference fit, and we make sure that the reduced section meets shear, combined stress and fatigue requirements, could this work?
I would be using the "spacer" in bearing, to replace the compressive stress in the section. Under tension from a load in the other direction, the beam would have a much reduced S, or at least that's the hope. Some tack welding would be used to ensure the adjacent parts do not buckle locally when undergoing the primary bending stresses.
What do you think?
tg