Euler
Structural
- Dec 14, 2001
- 2
I am designing a structure that will support a vibrating screen. The screen will operate at about 21 hz and must be mounted on a platform about 28 feet in the air, supported by 4 columns. The platform must straddle some existing tanks with a rigid frame in the direction perpendicular to the vibration motion and will be fairly heavily braced with tube steel x-braces in the direction parrallel to the vibration motion. Usually, we try to design the structure with a natual frequency of at least 1.5 times the machine frequency. In this case, that would be very expensive and impractical, if not impossible. We plan to design the platform with a natural frequency of .5 or less times the machine frequency. Will the structure respond as though a shock load was applied, as the machine frequecy matches the structure nf(10 hz), even though it is momentary? If the machine "spins up" in about 3 to 4 seconds, is the force developed, when the machine hits the structure nf, so momentary that the it is not a realistic force? Is there any reasonably priced software out there that could be used to simulate this process? Thanks