blacktalon
Mechanical
- Feb 9, 2005
- 37
Hey guys...
Im working on a new project at work that basically requires that an Electrical Control Box be isolated from a 50g saw-tooth shock pulse as per mil-std....
I will be adding more info to this topic tomorrow as I post data etc... but I have some questions...
I have set-up and solved the differential equation of motion for the system numerically by maple and set-up plots of the displacement, velocity, and acceleration.
Now, I keep running into conflicting results with other applied theory....
The Eqn of motion I solved is:
x"(t) + 2*z*w*x'(t) + w^2*x(t) = -h(t)
where:
x"(t) = absolute accleration of the module
x'(t) = relative velocity of the module
x(t) = relative displacement of module with respect
to the structure it is embeded in.
(distance between module and structure wall
which represent spring deflection)
z = damping ratio
w = natural frequency of the isolator(s) chosen
h(t)= acceleration of the surrounding structure which
I defined to be a unit step function
(heaviside function) for 3 pulses.
**This is a base excitation problem
Now the base excitation a sawtooth/50g/0.006s duration pulse 3 times.
The manufacturer of the module states the module cannot withstand more than 10g of shock.
Now I have solved the differential equation and the results look correct. (I will post later)
I am probably going to use a rubber bushings (damp ratio = .05, nat freq's 5-30Hz)
Now.... questions
1) Technically isnt the forcing frequency 1/.006 and not 1/(2*.006)? I mean thats where the same ref point on the pulse re-occurs... why do some texts do that?
For the time being I assume my forcing freq = 1/.006 = 167Hz
2) Despite the space contraints, I cant seem to be able to get the shock down below 10g's, even if I alter the nat freq of the isolators or the damp ratio to rediculous values.... but by the theory of transmissibility....
damp ratio = .05
forcing freq = 167Hz
isolator nat freq = 68Hz or lower
should provide me with a shock isolation 0f T=0.2....
50g *0.2 = 10g
but the differential equation solution doesnt do this... and im 99% sure its right....
Even if I change the nat freq input in the diff eqn model closer to 167Hz... the equation simulates resonance.. (as expected)
***And yes I am converting the nat frqu to angular frequency properlly***
I guess my questions is... is it even possible to reduce a 50g shock to below 10g? Cause I cant seem to simulate it...
Ideas? I will be posting better info tomorrow...
Im working on a new project at work that basically requires that an Electrical Control Box be isolated from a 50g saw-tooth shock pulse as per mil-std....
I will be adding more info to this topic tomorrow as I post data etc... but I have some questions...
I have set-up and solved the differential equation of motion for the system numerically by maple and set-up plots of the displacement, velocity, and acceleration.
Now, I keep running into conflicting results with other applied theory....
The Eqn of motion I solved is:
x"(t) + 2*z*w*x'(t) + w^2*x(t) = -h(t)
where:
x"(t) = absolute accleration of the module
x'(t) = relative velocity of the module
x(t) = relative displacement of module with respect
to the structure it is embeded in.
(distance between module and structure wall
which represent spring deflection)
z = damping ratio
w = natural frequency of the isolator(s) chosen
h(t)= acceleration of the surrounding structure which
I defined to be a unit step function
(heaviside function) for 3 pulses.
**This is a base excitation problem
Now the base excitation a sawtooth/50g/0.006s duration pulse 3 times.
The manufacturer of the module states the module cannot withstand more than 10g of shock.
Now I have solved the differential equation and the results look correct. (I will post later)
I am probably going to use a rubber bushings (damp ratio = .05, nat freq's 5-30Hz)
Now.... questions
1) Technically isnt the forcing frequency 1/.006 and not 1/(2*.006)? I mean thats where the same ref point on the pulse re-occurs... why do some texts do that?
For the time being I assume my forcing freq = 1/.006 = 167Hz
2) Despite the space contraints, I cant seem to be able to get the shock down below 10g's, even if I alter the nat freq of the isolators or the damp ratio to rediculous values.... but by the theory of transmissibility....
damp ratio = .05
forcing freq = 167Hz
isolator nat freq = 68Hz or lower
should provide me with a shock isolation 0f T=0.2....
50g *0.2 = 10g
but the differential equation solution doesnt do this... and im 99% sure its right....
Even if I change the nat freq input in the diff eqn model closer to 167Hz... the equation simulates resonance.. (as expected)
***And yes I am converting the nat frqu to angular frequency properlly***
I guess my questions is... is it even possible to reduce a 50g shock to below 10g? Cause I cant seem to simulate it...
Ideas? I will be posting better info tomorrow...