JJ22mW
Aerospace
- Aug 13, 2008
- 13
I've got a question regarding what the industry standard way is to apply air loads to flight control surfaces such as ailerons that have the typical sheetmetal skin/ ribs/spar design. On the project I'm working on, the loads are applied directly to the ribs/spars in the loads FEM, and nothing to the skin. Is this common practice? I can see that if you apply loads to skins, a linear FEM would cause the flat skin bays to react in bending, ie no membrane, which is not realistic for thin skins. But by not applying pressures to the skins, is this potentially unconservative because no out of plane loads are superimposed with the inplane loads in the analysis when checking skin buckling?
I guess this leads to another question:
If a flat plate has a pressure applied to it and causes it to go membrane, when you superimpose the inplane shear and compression loads, does the plate have a higher buckling allow than if no normal pressure loads were considered? I see how the membrane tensions could help out, but you also now have an induced curvature that may affect buckling strength.
Thanks for your responses!
I guess this leads to another question:
If a flat plate has a pressure applied to it and causes it to go membrane, when you superimpose the inplane shear and compression loads, does the plate have a higher buckling allow than if no normal pressure loads were considered? I see how the membrane tensions could help out, but you also now have an induced curvature that may affect buckling strength.
Thanks for your responses!