junfanbl
Marine/Ocean
- Jun 10, 2015
- 90
Hello, I am wondering if somebody can help provide me a new way to find the fluid volume of pipes.
Typically I would model a pipe to spec inside NX and find the fluid volume by subtracting the volume of the inner diameter from the volume of the outer diameter. However, this can approach can take time if you have dozens of fittings to calculate. What I want to do is, instead of going through the trouble of modeling to spec, I would much rather take a partially modeled fitting and reverse engineer the volume.
What I mean is, If I have an elbow that has an outer diameter of 4.5 (in^2), and a wall thickness of .1(in^2), and for example sake, a fluid volume of 75(in^2). I need to add a wall thickness of .5 to get the correct volume. Instead of adjusting the model, can we just adjust the volume to accurately reflect a change in the geometry?
Typically I would model a pipe to spec inside NX and find the fluid volume by subtracting the volume of the inner diameter from the volume of the outer diameter. However, this can approach can take time if you have dozens of fittings to calculate. What I want to do is, instead of going through the trouble of modeling to spec, I would much rather take a partially modeled fitting and reverse engineer the volume.
What I mean is, If I have an elbow that has an outer diameter of 4.5 (in^2), and a wall thickness of .1(in^2), and for example sake, a fluid volume of 75(in^2). I need to add a wall thickness of .5 to get the correct volume. Instead of adjusting the model, can we just adjust the volume to accurately reflect a change in the geometry?