elogesh
Mechanical
- May 10, 2002
- 187
Hai,
I have a problem regarding natural frequency measurement in vibration sweep test. The natural frequencies of the component in three different orientations (perpendicular to each other) is evaluated from FEM and found to be 50Hz(bending mode), 120Hz(bending mode) and 360 Hz (axial mode) in horizontal orientation, vertical orientation and axial orientation respectively. Then the component is mounted on a fixture and fixture is mounted on vibration shaker. The vibration shaker is from Ling dynamic systems/Dactron. Then Vibration sweep is carried out from 10 Hz to 2000 Hz in order to find out the natural frequency. The component is mounted in horizontal position, so that horizontal mode gets excited. Using accelerometer the displacement values monitored against frequency. Surprisingly the horizontal frequency is found to be 30 Hz (FEM predicted = 50 Hz). The procedure is repeated for vertical orientation is 35 Hz (FEM predicted = 120 Hz).
I checked the FEM model and found to be ok. Even for modal correction, I can expect + or –10% variation. Now, I am doubtful about experimental measurement. One of possible reasons for difference between FEM and experiment is, thin fixture used for mounting the component. They used thin fixture, since they have weight restrictions that can be tested on shaker.
How can I find experimentally that the natural frequency is of component or component with the fixture?
While writing this thread, I got a strike that during experiment; we measured displacement-using accelerometer on component only. I should have done that in fixture also. I will do it?
Apart from that is there any other way of checking the ambiguity in experimental testing? This is because we have limited knowledge about experimental testing.
Regards,
Logesh.E
I have a problem regarding natural frequency measurement in vibration sweep test. The natural frequencies of the component in three different orientations (perpendicular to each other) is evaluated from FEM and found to be 50Hz(bending mode), 120Hz(bending mode) and 360 Hz (axial mode) in horizontal orientation, vertical orientation and axial orientation respectively. Then the component is mounted on a fixture and fixture is mounted on vibration shaker. The vibration shaker is from Ling dynamic systems/Dactron. Then Vibration sweep is carried out from 10 Hz to 2000 Hz in order to find out the natural frequency. The component is mounted in horizontal position, so that horizontal mode gets excited. Using accelerometer the displacement values monitored against frequency. Surprisingly the horizontal frequency is found to be 30 Hz (FEM predicted = 50 Hz). The procedure is repeated for vertical orientation is 35 Hz (FEM predicted = 120 Hz).
I checked the FEM model and found to be ok. Even for modal correction, I can expect + or –10% variation. Now, I am doubtful about experimental measurement. One of possible reasons for difference between FEM and experiment is, thin fixture used for mounting the component. They used thin fixture, since they have weight restrictions that can be tested on shaker.
How can I find experimentally that the natural frequency is of component or component with the fixture?
While writing this thread, I got a strike that during experiment; we measured displacement-using accelerometer on component only. I should have done that in fixture also. I will do it?
Apart from that is there any other way of checking the ambiguity in experimental testing? This is because we have limited knowledge about experimental testing.
Regards,
Logesh.E