pdybeck
Mechanical
- May 14, 2003
- 599
I have an interesting design problem and was hoping someone out there would have a suggestion or experience in joining metal cable. I understand there are many cable clamps and crimps available to join cable, but the cable in this design regularly rides over a pulley with a somewhat small diameter. This causes a high stress concentration around the device used to clamp the cables together and ultimately the cable fatigues right at the interface between the cable and clamp because the clamping device is to rigid to bend around the pulley in the manner that the cables do. Numerous methods have been tried to reduce this stress on the cable because of this phenomenon - including different clamp types, trying to blend the cables and clamps together, trying to weave the cables together etc. - all to no avail. The pulley size is fixed and cannot be increased in size as the larger radius of curvature would provide a lower stress in this interface. Does anyone know of some good methods to join cable to avoid this problem? I hope I have explained the situation well enough. Please post if you need more info.
The pessimist says the glass is half empty. The optimist says the glass is half full. The engineer says the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.
The pessimist says the glass is half empty. The optimist says the glass is half full. The engineer says the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.