brysonc
Mechanical
- Apr 8, 2006
- 20
First, a little intro -- I design metal brackets that bolt to trucks that hold various types of equipment, all furnished by a third party. We perform structural simulation (FEA) on all of our brackets, but we don't have much information on the equipment that our brackets hold. We currently treat all of this equipment as rigid, but this is a poor assumption for some components (primarily antennas).
I am currently putting together a data acquisition system in order to determine the dominant natural frequencies and corresponding mass participation factors so that I can have a more accurate model to use in our FEA. The problem that I have run into is that I can easily extract the dominant natural frequencies and reproduce those as simple spring/mass systems, but I am not confident in my method of determining the modal participation of each mode.
Can this be determined by comparing the magnitudes of vibration at the first few frequencies in each direction? Or, is there some kind of normalization that needs to occur before doing this?
Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks,
Bryson
I am currently putting together a data acquisition system in order to determine the dominant natural frequencies and corresponding mass participation factors so that I can have a more accurate model to use in our FEA. The problem that I have run into is that I can easily extract the dominant natural frequencies and reproduce those as simple spring/mass systems, but I am not confident in my method of determining the modal participation of each mode.
Can this be determined by comparing the magnitudes of vibration at the first few frequencies in each direction? Or, is there some kind of normalization that needs to occur before doing this?
Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks,
Bryson