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single or double shear? 1

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c0rd0bes

Mechanical
May 13, 2010
25
Hi gents I am a mechanical tech a little rusty on my theoretical side, can anyone answer this for me please.

I have two round hollow steel sections suspended at one end verically and carrying a load at the bottom end SWL 150kg. one section slides into the other for height extension and held in place by use of a pin through both sections.

My question is would the pin be thought of as having 2 shear loads or is it in double shear?

I am sourcing and buying alternative replacement positive locking pins and want to spec correctly as it is part of an assy with a SWL of 150kg.

Many thanks
 
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It is double shear, but be careful. If there's even a slight gap between the faces of the parts then it's no longer simply in shear -- it's in bending. In other words, if the inner tube is not fairly tight inside the outer tube, then the pin is in bending and that's quite different.

Engineering is not the science behind building. It is the science behind not building.
 
Tex is correct, but there doesn't have to be a gap between the faces. Because because part of the pin is in free space, there is a moment which must be considered. The pin should be designed using provisions for pins, not bolts.
 
Hi all a bit bellated but thank you all kindly for the replies they were invaluable and helped greatly

thanks

c0rd0bes
 
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