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Splitting Metal

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kamccandless

Mechanical
Jan 16, 2013
3
I'm trying to Figure how to calculate the force needed to be applied to a wedge to split a piece of metal. The metal would be sitting on a flat surface and not constrained in any way (other than the surface it is sitting on) and the wedge would be coming straight down on it. The piece of metal would be a a rectangular prim, and the wedge would be going across the smaller cross-sectional area. I have seen similar threads to this but i didn't see any straight answers come from them.
 
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How thick??
What material??

They make shears that are designed specifically to do this. Or send it out to fab shop to perform the work??
 
I would like to come up with and equation so i could calculate the force for any thickness (the wedge will always be wider than the material being cut), and the material would grade 8 steel.
 
The resulting 'split' edges (and adjacent faces) would be a mess. What is the purpose of splitting the material in such a manner.
 
There is no simple equation that can be used for this. Plastic deformation and fracture are complicated mechanisms that cannot be simply defined, because there are too many interacting variables.
 
I figured as much I'm looking more for like a ball park figures, but I may have come up with something today that will work for me.

Thanks for responding guys.
 
kamccandless said:
I may have come up with something today that will work for me.

It's probably going to be wrong.

My 0,02$

NX 7.5.5.4 with Teamcenter 8 on win7 64
Intel Xeon @3.2GHz
8GB RAM
Nvidia Quadro 2000
 
Screwman1,

Don't forget grain direction, wrought/forged/cast, surface discontinuities, etc.
 
At any rate, a very large ballpark:)

Regards,

Mike
 
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