fang54
Aerospace
- Nov 11, 2003
- 5
We ran a random vib. on our component. After the vib test the lab discover that their slip table had some lubrication issues and fixed it, and we ran the post-sweep, and compared it to the pre-test sweep. Everything matched line to line, except one peak (@ ~60Hz)now is lower. we ran another post-sweep, and the 2 post-sweep looked exactly the same. Now we are left to explain the discrepancy to our customers. I want to eliminate and be ready for a few possibilities before blaming it on the unlubed table.
So, I understand that a frequency change of the peaks is indicative of growing of cracks/damage. What about the amplitude change? What does that usually indicate? slippage? or are the amplitude and frequency change usually linked?
Thanks for any insight.
So, I understand that a frequency change of the peaks is indicative of growing of cracks/damage. What about the amplitude change? What does that usually indicate? slippage? or are the amplitude and frequency change usually linked?
Thanks for any insight.