Slagathor
Mechanical
- Jan 6, 2002
- 129
I am hoping someone with expertise in strain gauge configurations can offer some guidance. My company has need to doing some torque testing on a rotating shaft. We are looking at a number of wireless strain gauge set ups that can handle the task. The question I have is not really related to wireless / rotating measurement though. That is just for background.
The shaft that we need to measure torque on is also subject to significant axial tension. When you install/bond a suitable strain gauge (such as this... will the presence of axial load impact the accurate measurement of torque (shear strain)? If so, is there some sort of compensating circuit that can be created? Is it possible to establish how axial load impacts the strain measurement, and compensate for it during data analysis?
The application is for power measurement between an electric motor, and pumps, compressors, etc, mainly during steady state conditions. This is for acceptance testing, so the closer to zero error we can get, the better.
Thanks for your input.
The shaft that we need to measure torque on is also subject to significant axial tension. When you install/bond a suitable strain gauge (such as this... will the presence of axial load impact the accurate measurement of torque (shear strain)? If so, is there some sort of compensating circuit that can be created? Is it possible to establish how axial load impacts the strain measurement, and compensate for it during data analysis?
The application is for power measurement between an electric motor, and pumps, compressors, etc, mainly during steady state conditions. This is for acceptance testing, so the closer to zero error we can get, the better.
Thanks for your input.