trainguy
Structural
- Apr 26, 2002
- 706
Hello all.
I have a situation here. Imagine a railcar truck (the steel casting that connects the wheelsets to the locomotive) having been in service for 40 years.
The truck has been subjected to fatigue loading all this time. It's analysis data is unknown, so the stress range is not known, neither are any of the fatigue category parameters.
Then, someone comes along and adds a welded bracket, for which our office is doing the design. This bracket will support a damper which is again a fatigue structure.
What is the common approach in this kind of retrofit? Clearly we are taking care of all the bracket fatigue issues, but what is a practical approach to making sure there are no surprises (cracks in supporting structure)down the line?
Is it common practice to redo the full structural fatigue analysis including the effects of the added bracket?
Thanks in advance.
tg
I have a situation here. Imagine a railcar truck (the steel casting that connects the wheelsets to the locomotive) having been in service for 40 years.
The truck has been subjected to fatigue loading all this time. It's analysis data is unknown, so the stress range is not known, neither are any of the fatigue category parameters.
Then, someone comes along and adds a welded bracket, for which our office is doing the design. This bracket will support a damper which is again a fatigue structure.
What is the common approach in this kind of retrofit? Clearly we are taking care of all the bracket fatigue issues, but what is a practical approach to making sure there are no surprises (cracks in supporting structure)down the line?
Is it common practice to redo the full structural fatigue analysis including the effects of the added bracket?
Thanks in advance.
tg