kjoiner
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2002
- 462
Hello,
I don't do a lot of plastics design and I'm working on a design that will involve a snap fit and before I get too far down the design path and especially before I commit to tooling I wanted to get some input from other users. I've looked over previous posts regarding snap fits and have some design guides and material data from plastics companies (DuPont etc.) but still have some questions.
Application:
A round ring - a torus - that looks a lot like a shower curtain ring. The ring will split into two semicircles so that two identical pieces make up the ring - one end will have a barb and the other will have an undercut hole that passes through the cut face and exits tangengially out the other side. The cross section is Ø.25" and the ring itself is Ø1.00 on the ID. Hopefully this paints an adequate picture.
I want to take the two halves and snap them together permanently so I'm planning to use a 90° on the barbs. Also I need some location and good bending strength from the barb (not all of it can be split) so the ring won't break in half like a cookie. I also want at least a 25 pound pull apart load ( 12.5 lb per side of the ring or 6.25lb per barb leg).
I'm planning to use black Acetal for its low friction and good mechanical properties.
Question
1. I'm starting with a .02 undercut and my "beam length" of the barb is about .160" long. The OD of the shank of the barb is Ø.155. This leads to a stress of around 14,000 psi which sounds like trouble, but when I use other examples for barbs and calculate the strain, I get around 6%. The beam cross section is semicircular and about .05 thick (I can' thin it down too much or I'll lose the tensile strength for the pull apart force). My question is what is an allowable strain for Acetal? I've seen anywhere from 1% to 10%.
My main limit right now is that I'm limited to the overall length of the barb since I don't want it sticking out the back of the ring where someone could possibly unlatch it. I want the ring to require cutting to be removed. Therefore I'm juggling between the length of barb and the length of the slit in barb which detracts from the loctaional requirements I mentioned previously.
Hopefully I've provided enough information to provide background for my question. Thank in advance for your help.
Kyle
I don't do a lot of plastics design and I'm working on a design that will involve a snap fit and before I get too far down the design path and especially before I commit to tooling I wanted to get some input from other users. I've looked over previous posts regarding snap fits and have some design guides and material data from plastics companies (DuPont etc.) but still have some questions.
Application:
A round ring - a torus - that looks a lot like a shower curtain ring. The ring will split into two semicircles so that two identical pieces make up the ring - one end will have a barb and the other will have an undercut hole that passes through the cut face and exits tangengially out the other side. The cross section is Ø.25" and the ring itself is Ø1.00 on the ID. Hopefully this paints an adequate picture.
I want to take the two halves and snap them together permanently so I'm planning to use a 90° on the barbs. Also I need some location and good bending strength from the barb (not all of it can be split) so the ring won't break in half like a cookie. I also want at least a 25 pound pull apart load ( 12.5 lb per side of the ring or 6.25lb per barb leg).
I'm planning to use black Acetal for its low friction and good mechanical properties.
Question
1. I'm starting with a .02 undercut and my "beam length" of the barb is about .160" long. The OD of the shank of the barb is Ø.155. This leads to a stress of around 14,000 psi which sounds like trouble, but when I use other examples for barbs and calculate the strain, I get around 6%. The beam cross section is semicircular and about .05 thick (I can' thin it down too much or I'll lose the tensile strength for the pull apart force). My question is what is an allowable strain for Acetal? I've seen anywhere from 1% to 10%.
My main limit right now is that I'm limited to the overall length of the barb since I don't want it sticking out the back of the ring where someone could possibly unlatch it. I want the ring to require cutting to be removed. Therefore I'm juggling between the length of barb and the length of the slit in barb which detracts from the loctaional requirements I mentioned previously.
Hopefully I've provided enough information to provide background for my question. Thank in advance for your help.
Kyle