Twoballcane
Mechanical
- Jan 17, 2006
- 951
Hello All,
OK I got one that I'm stumped on that came accross my desk. I have a hose that is 4in in diameter, 50in in lenght, and has a 3.5ft bend radius. Once 250psi is applied, what is the reaction forces at each end of the hose to keep it in a 3.5ft bend radius? I'm calculating the load to be F=PA, so A=(4)(50)=200in^2 (area down center of hose), thus F=250(200)=50,000lbF. The reaction loads would be 25,000lbF on each side of the hose. Wow that is huge! I'm doing somthing wrong.
Thank you in advance for your help!
Tobalcane
"If you avoid failure, you also avoid success."
OK I got one that I'm stumped on that came accross my desk. I have a hose that is 4in in diameter, 50in in lenght, and has a 3.5ft bend radius. Once 250psi is applied, what is the reaction forces at each end of the hose to keep it in a 3.5ft bend radius? I'm calculating the load to be F=PA, so A=(4)(50)=200in^2 (area down center of hose), thus F=250(200)=50,000lbF. The reaction loads would be 25,000lbF on each side of the hose. Wow that is huge! I'm doing somthing wrong.
Thank you in advance for your help!
Tobalcane
"If you avoid failure, you also avoid success."