jreamer
Mechanical
- Apr 11, 2008
- 4
Hi,
I am trying to figure out how much torque we need to spin a compressed object. I am applying 6000 pounds of compression force to an object between 2 plattens. In between the plattens we have 2 round plates supported by 8 crowned cam follower bearings per side. The manufacturer of the bearings say that the coefficient of friction for the bearings is .0025. The plates are 24" diameter. We want to apply a torque to the bottom plate to spin the entire object. I am looking for an equation to figure this out. I looked one up in my old text book and applied that, but we were greatly undersized. The equation I used was (2/3)*(coefficient of friction)*(radius)*(force)= Torque Required. I might be applying the forces wrong or the coefficient of friction wrong, or even using the wrong equation, I am not sure. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
I am trying to figure out how much torque we need to spin a compressed object. I am applying 6000 pounds of compression force to an object between 2 plattens. In between the plattens we have 2 round plates supported by 8 crowned cam follower bearings per side. The manufacturer of the bearings say that the coefficient of friction for the bearings is .0025. The plates are 24" diameter. We want to apply a torque to the bottom plate to spin the entire object. I am looking for an equation to figure this out. I looked one up in my old text book and applied that, but we were greatly undersized. The equation I used was (2/3)*(coefficient of friction)*(radius)*(force)= Torque Required. I might be applying the forces wrong or the coefficient of friction wrong, or even using the wrong equation, I am not sure. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.