ProjEngAnalyst
Mechanical
- Jan 12, 2015
- 5
Hi all,
I have some acceleration data that was taken from a very stiff location near the rear wheel mounting position on a 4 wheeled vehicle. The terrain traversed is mild to moderately aggressive (most aggressive would be a curb hit at approx 10 mph). The vehicle has no suspension, thus the drivetrain is hard mounted.
This data is sampled at 10000hz.
My concern is that it shows spikes (approx 40-50) of 60 g's whose duration are about 5 ten-thousanths of a second. This kind of acceleration load resolves to a force of something like 60,000 lbf. No way.
If the data is resampled at 50 hz it looks alot more appropriate, albeit because of the effects of aliasing. (MTS likes 50 hz data, which is why we resampled at this rate.)
I am looking to use this data in order to perform a FEA analysis by transposing the loading from the historical data into static cases and using the cumulative damage method to determine an approximate life.
If I apply a 60,000 lb static load to it, its just going to blow up. This cannot be the case.
Does anyone have experience taking accelerometer data and possibly know what the source of these odd spikes are?
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Nick
I have some acceleration data that was taken from a very stiff location near the rear wheel mounting position on a 4 wheeled vehicle. The terrain traversed is mild to moderately aggressive (most aggressive would be a curb hit at approx 10 mph). The vehicle has no suspension, thus the drivetrain is hard mounted.
This data is sampled at 10000hz.
My concern is that it shows spikes (approx 40-50) of 60 g's whose duration are about 5 ten-thousanths of a second. This kind of acceleration load resolves to a force of something like 60,000 lbf. No way.
If the data is resampled at 50 hz it looks alot more appropriate, albeit because of the effects of aliasing. (MTS likes 50 hz data, which is why we resampled at this rate.)
I am looking to use this data in order to perform a FEA analysis by transposing the loading from the historical data into static cases and using the cumulative damage method to determine an approximate life.
If I apply a 60,000 lb static load to it, its just going to blow up. This cannot be the case.
Does anyone have experience taking accelerometer data and possibly know what the source of these odd spikes are?
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Nick