madvlad
Aerospace
- Jan 21, 2008
- 21
Hey everybody...
So, I have a square-section tubular beam in pure bending.
Plastic bending theory tells me that my applied moment is below the allowable. However, plastic bending is for stable sections...So I need to show that the tube doesn't cripple, or even if it does, it can still withstand the applied moment.
Bruhn's C4.16 tells me to treat the compression side (of a square tube in bending) as a flat plate, which I'm guessing means equation C5.1, failing as shown in Fig C5.1 (right?)
When I do this, I get allowable stresses that are really high, no matter what pessimistic value I choose for Kc...which tells me it doesn't cripple, and supposedly the tension side will break first. (right?)
But everyone's bent a tube before... first it ovalises a bit, and then flattens out and fails, like when you bend a drinking straw. Most tubes fail like this, even a solid bar fails in this way if it's a ductile enough material.
The scenario examined by C5.1 doesn't really have anything to do with this observed failure mode.
So how do I predict that type of "ovalising" failure? There happen to be allowable curves given for round tubes (which I assume come from test), but not for any other shape.
Thanks in advance
Chris
So, I have a square-section tubular beam in pure bending.
Plastic bending theory tells me that my applied moment is below the allowable. However, plastic bending is for stable sections...So I need to show that the tube doesn't cripple, or even if it does, it can still withstand the applied moment.
Bruhn's C4.16 tells me to treat the compression side (of a square tube in bending) as a flat plate, which I'm guessing means equation C5.1, failing as shown in Fig C5.1 (right?)
When I do this, I get allowable stresses that are really high, no matter what pessimistic value I choose for Kc...which tells me it doesn't cripple, and supposedly the tension side will break first. (right?)
But everyone's bent a tube before... first it ovalises a bit, and then flattens out and fails, like when you bend a drinking straw. Most tubes fail like this, even a solid bar fails in this way if it's a ductile enough material.
The scenario examined by C5.1 doesn't really have anything to do with this observed failure mode.
So how do I predict that type of "ovalising" failure? There happen to be allowable curves given for round tubes (which I assume come from test), but not for any other shape.
Thanks in advance
Chris