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  1. MechinNC

    Root Cause Analysis - Steam Turbine

    I worked in a big steam plant a couple of decades ago. If we had trouble with our turbines that was beyond what we could do, we consulted or hired the turbine manufacturer (GE). Expensive, but they knew the machines.
  2. MechinNC

    The largest peacetime disaster in US Navy history...

    Navigating back then was not a perfect science. Celestial nav required clear skies. Get a few cloudy days and nights in a row and your dead reckoning can be pretty far off. In that case, officers need to err on the side of caution (as in keep farther off shore and slow down, etc). Wait until...
  3. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    Not a structural engr here, but I have put a fair amount of thought into this. Some here seem to have a LOT of experience in structural composites, and I certainly respect that knowledge. But to this generalist, I came up with a few possibilities: 1. Non uniform distribution of stress in the...
  4. MechinNC

    Norway bridge collapse - Part 2

    Why use wood at all?? The steel or iron bridge lasted, what 100yrs (??). Seems foolish.
  5. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    Yea, I know it did not have ribs. Just wondering if ribs would have made a better design.
  6. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I am no stress analysis type engr, but on that 5" thick CF cylinder in compression, are the stresses uniform throughout the laminate? I think not, but too lazy to research it. I know our Navy subs use ribs internal to the pressure hull. Wonder if this thing could have been built up with...
  7. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I read an interesting piece today in Vanity Fair. I'd post a link but I just burned up my free article. Now behind a paywall for me. A few interesting take-aways: 1. There were basically no substantial pieces of CF found in the wreckage. They picked up some shards, that is it. 2. Some of...
  8. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I could see water migrating into the CF hull, either through the sides protected with Rhino Liner (really??), or from the edges where the TI ends glued on. I do not think Rhino Liner has been tested to be non-permeable at 5000psi.
  9. MechinNC

    Bridge failure near Albany NY

    Fortunately could be a relatively easy fix. Cut out damaged section, fab new section (with proper reinforcement) and weld or rivet it in place. Could be done in situ. But who knows what the concrete already poured did. That was a lot of rebar on that concrete deck. Could see where the engr...
  10. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I too think the different response of the Ti end caps and CF hull to huge external pressure may have factored in here. If the end caps had more strain, that would have been transferred to the CF, and increased stress there. Or to the epoxy joint. No substitute for repeated deep dives with...
  11. MechinNC

    Bridge failure near Albany NY

    Stupid design. Top element from thin section should continue at least into next panel or two of the taller section. I can see that right away, and my study was in thermo and fluid flow!!
  12. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I think analyzing what happened in the last few milliseconds (or microseconds) of this crafts life is an interesting, albeit academic exercise. Kinda like analyzing what happens in an airliner when it hits the side of a mountain at 3-4-500mph. Well, it hit the mountain and bad things happened...
  13. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I've read a fair amount about CF testing in compression. Some good stuff linked here.. But what about fatigue response in compression? Seems like a vital bit in this failure. I could look it up, but I'm being a bit lazy!
  14. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visiting the Titanic is missing Part 2

    I would give credit to OG if they took a prototype of their submersible to a deep part of the ocean and did like 100 dives to test depth (what ever that is) and preferably took it on last dive to failure. Then the next boat would have some cred. Not clear at all what type of test protocol was...
  15. MechinNC

    Tourist submersible visting the Titanic is missing

    I wonder a bit about osmosis on that laminate. 5-6000psi is a LOT of pressure and wonder if water can get pushed into the laminate at that pressure. Also where the Ti end caps were glued to the CF cylinder ends. Osmosis there? The machined ends of the CF cylinder are particularly vulnerable...
  16. MechinNC

    Norway bridge collapse

    A few bits from a non-structural guy (mechanical): From various pics, the cross beam resting on the stone pier has a very light connection to the lower longitudinal beam. The beam must be wider than the pier to accommodate 2 1/2 lanes vs one on previous bridge. One would expect some steel of...
  17. MechinNC

    Electric Generator Exhaust

    No way would I vent the generator exhaust into a parking garage. It needs to be vented outside the building.
  18. MechinNC

    Texas’ Big Freeze: The 2021 Power Crisis and the Lessons Learned One Year Later

    Anyone know what caused those six Tx gen plants to trip off line like a week ago? Tried snooping around and found basically nothing. Overload? Under volts? Under freq? Any of those is more a grid management issue and not a plant fault. I know this is the season to do sched maint, but they...
  19. MechinNC

    Coupling Selection for Three Phase Induction Motor Started Direct on Line

    How much torque goes through the coupling depends on the inertia in the motor rotor, compared to the inertia in the gearbox/compressors. So torque through the coupling should be less than max torque of the motor. A portion of the torque has to accelerate the rotor. Curious why you switched to...
  20. MechinNC

    Gears load

    That three pinion set will be a bugger to set center distances to get them to mesh and to do it equally. Just a little deviation in the distances would transfer the load to one or the other. Would much rather have a single pinion (or pair, not three) and if tooth load is too high, go with...

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