Vibac
Mechanical
- Apr 26, 2007
- 28
Hello
I wondered if any of you have had experience comparing traditional (experimental) modal analysis with operational modal analysis? To my understanding, from reading the B&K website etc. it seems that the latter output-only method provides a very versatile and practical alternative to the traditional method where you need to control and measure the input force. Let's assume the test subjects cover both machinery and civil structures such as bridges.
The shortcomings I've noticed so far are:
- Modal shapes are generally unscaled
- Harmonic excitation from the test object itself (e.g. rotating machinery) may show up as natural frequencies in the analysis.
Do any of you experienced people have practical experience regarding the limitations of Operational Modal Analysis? How about accuracy in terms of modal parameters compared to the traditional method?
Regards
René
I wondered if any of you have had experience comparing traditional (experimental) modal analysis with operational modal analysis? To my understanding, from reading the B&K website etc. it seems that the latter output-only method provides a very versatile and practical alternative to the traditional method where you need to control and measure the input force. Let's assume the test subjects cover both machinery and civil structures such as bridges.
The shortcomings I've noticed so far are:
- Modal shapes are generally unscaled
- Harmonic excitation from the test object itself (e.g. rotating machinery) may show up as natural frequencies in the analysis.
Do any of you experienced people have practical experience regarding the limitations of Operational Modal Analysis? How about accuracy in terms of modal parameters compared to the traditional method?
Regards
René