Jun 8, 2005 #1 Darken99 Mechanical Joined Apr 5, 2005 Messages 135 Location US Anyone know of a equation for solving arc height based on the diameter/radius and the arc angle? I know how to solve it in autocad but just wondering if there is an equation to solve it without drawing it. Thanks
Anyone know of a equation for solving arc height based on the diameter/radius and the arc angle? I know how to solve it in autocad but just wondering if there is an equation to solve it without drawing it. Thanks
Jun 8, 2005 #2 CarlB Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 11, 2001 Messages 1,195 Location US From survey book, M=R[1 - cos (Delta/2)] where Delta is the central angle; M is the middle ordinate, the distance from the middle point on the arc to the middle point on the chord. Upvote 0 Downvote
From survey book, M=R[1 - cos (Delta/2)] where Delta is the central angle; M is the middle ordinate, the distance from the middle point on the arc to the middle point on the chord.
Jun 8, 2005 Thread starter #3 Darken99 Mechanical Joined Apr 5, 2005 Messages 135 Location US Great thanks Upvote 0 Downvote
Jun 10, 2005 Thread starter #4 Darken99 Mechanical Joined Apr 5, 2005 Messages 135 Location US ok that equation works good for solving things but I have a question about how the math works in reverse when im trying to solve the angle. If I have Cos(delta/2) = .5244 I can not remember how to simplify this equation to solve delta. Thanks Upvote 0 Downvote
ok that equation works good for solving things but I have a question about how the math works in reverse when im trying to solve the angle. If I have Cos(delta/2) = .5244 I can not remember how to simplify this equation to solve delta. Thanks
Jun 10, 2005 #5 CarlB Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 11, 2001 Messages 1,195 Location US Take the arccos (also cos -1 on calculators) of 0.5244, get 58 degrees, which id delta/2, so delta is 117 degrees (rounded). Upvote 0 Downvote
Take the arccos (also cos -1 on calculators) of 0.5244, get 58 degrees, which id delta/2, so delta is 117 degrees (rounded).
Jun 10, 2005 Thread starter #6 Darken99 Mechanical Joined Apr 5, 2005 Messages 135 Location US Ok thanks... That is what I did. It just seemed to high of a angle. Thanks again Upvote 0 Downvote
Jun 10, 2005 #7 CarlB Civil/Environmental Joined Jul 11, 2001 Messages 1,195 Location US The curve diagrams in these pubs may help visualize: http://www.usace.army.mil/usace-docs/eng-manuals/em1110-1-1005/c-9.pdfhttp://www.ctre.iastate.edu/educweb/ce353/lec05/lecture.htm Upvote 0 Downvote
The curve diagrams in these pubs may help visualize: http://www.usace.army.mil/usace-docs/eng-manuals/em1110-1-1005/c-9.pdfhttp://www.ctre.iastate.edu/educweb/ce353/lec05/lecture.htm