TheBigMike
Mechanical
- Dec 12, 2010
- 2
Hello 3DCAD Forums,
New member, first post!
First some background:
I've searched around on Google and can't find help on this. I also registered on a CAD-specific forum and it's been half a week and no one has replied lol. I have a bachelors degree in Mechanical Engineering and I've been to this site many times over the years and finally decided to register.
I am not sure if this is the place to ask about Solidworks questions, but I know this forum is very active and many here use SW, so here goes. (I am using SW2010)
My question:
Do I need to do anything special to my assembly in order for SW to consider centrifugal forces in Motion Analysis?
For example, I have a rotating disk with two face-mounted pegs near its edge spaced 180-degrees apart. I then have two beams with one hole on the end of each beam that fits over each peg. I've added a rotary motor to the disk and set some arbitrary RPM, say 500. I give a material to everything, say 1020 Steel.
Using Motion Analysis, what happens is that when the motion begins, the arms immediately move inwards towards the center and then rotate back out -- and back around again, indefinitely. I could be wrong but I'm pretty sure they would move outward by centrifugal force and would eventually remain straight out forever (at constant speed), not continue to rotate around and around and around literally forever.
I've done this with the pegs on the leading side of the arms (where the pegs are pulling the arms) and with them at the trailed side (where the pegs are pushing the arms), I've done really fast RPMs, I've added gravity, all no change.
I have added friction to the concentric mates, which does allow the arms to remain extended as I'd expect, but with a more complex model that I am working on, friction is just a band-aid and not a centrifugal force enabler in SW.
Am I going crazy or is there some setting I'm supposed to enable before SW will consider centrifugal forces?
Here is a short video of what SW is doing:
I really don't think this should happen. It continues on forever. I realize there is no air resistance or friction in this video, but what happened to centrifugal forces, how to I enable them?
Thank you very, very much in advance!
BigMike
New member, first post!
First some background:
I've searched around on Google and can't find help on this. I also registered on a CAD-specific forum and it's been half a week and no one has replied lol. I have a bachelors degree in Mechanical Engineering and I've been to this site many times over the years and finally decided to register.
I am not sure if this is the place to ask about Solidworks questions, but I know this forum is very active and many here use SW, so here goes. (I am using SW2010)
My question:
Do I need to do anything special to my assembly in order for SW to consider centrifugal forces in Motion Analysis?
For example, I have a rotating disk with two face-mounted pegs near its edge spaced 180-degrees apart. I then have two beams with one hole on the end of each beam that fits over each peg. I've added a rotary motor to the disk and set some arbitrary RPM, say 500. I give a material to everything, say 1020 Steel.
Using Motion Analysis, what happens is that when the motion begins, the arms immediately move inwards towards the center and then rotate back out -- and back around again, indefinitely. I could be wrong but I'm pretty sure they would move outward by centrifugal force and would eventually remain straight out forever (at constant speed), not continue to rotate around and around and around literally forever.
I've done this with the pegs on the leading side of the arms (where the pegs are pulling the arms) and with them at the trailed side (where the pegs are pushing the arms), I've done really fast RPMs, I've added gravity, all no change.
I have added friction to the concentric mates, which does allow the arms to remain extended as I'd expect, but with a more complex model that I am working on, friction is just a band-aid and not a centrifugal force enabler in SW.
Am I going crazy or is there some setting I'm supposed to enable before SW will consider centrifugal forces?
Here is a short video of what SW is doing:
I really don't think this should happen. It continues on forever. I realize there is no air resistance or friction in this video, but what happened to centrifugal forces, how to I enable them?
Thank you very, very much in advance!
BigMike