sethro5hc
Mechanical
- Sep 9, 2009
- 35
This is a hitch attachment product for an automobile. We're increasing the angle that the hitch attaches by +3 degrees, the factory has informed us that they'd like to do it one of the following two ways.
1) change angle A
2) change angle B
changing angle B would likely be easier, but which would be most structurally sound. As a background, angle B would just be bent an additional 3 degrees, while angle A would mean cutting the parts on the left backwards and welding the part with its current 90 degree bend on at a 3 degree incline.
Changing angle B would leave the shearing on that weld having roughly the same effect but would change the forces on the bend shown at angle B, while changing angle A would change the forces on that weld.
That's a simplified version, but my question to you guys is which would be more structurally sound and would likely have the higher yield point? A, leaving the 90 degree bend but tilting the whole thing back at the weld, or B, just benging it up to an 87* bend rather than 90 and leaving the weld alone.
Any help is appreciated.
1) change angle A
2) change angle B
changing angle B would likely be easier, but which would be most structurally sound. As a background, angle B would just be bent an additional 3 degrees, while angle A would mean cutting the parts on the left backwards and welding the part with its current 90 degree bend on at a 3 degree incline.
Changing angle B would leave the shearing on that weld having roughly the same effect but would change the forces on the bend shown at angle B, while changing angle A would change the forces on that weld.
That's a simplified version, but my question to you guys is which would be more structurally sound and would likely have the higher yield point? A, leaving the 90 degree bend but tilting the whole thing back at the weld, or B, just benging it up to an 87* bend rather than 90 and leaving the weld alone.
Any help is appreciated.