Willers
Mechanical
- Feb 4, 2009
- 18
A stage in one of our manufacturing processes involves the rolling of a cylinder. Inevitably, the cylinders are not fed into the roller perfectly square to the backstop.
Attached is a pitiful attempt at explaining the resulting shape of the cylinder (exaggerated).
The next process in production is welding of the cylinder seam, and stops on the weld machine force the cylinder back into shape. Although tests have been carried out on the force required for this, and some FEA, i'm attempting to validate them numerically.
While I believe the cylinder can be modelled as large helix/spring with one revolution, I cannot find any formulas relating this to a rectangular x-sectional helix.
Is modelling this as a combined bending and torsion problem, in order to determine vertical deflection/force possible, or is it too complex?
Thanks in advance
Attached is a pitiful attempt at explaining the resulting shape of the cylinder (exaggerated).
The next process in production is welding of the cylinder seam, and stops on the weld machine force the cylinder back into shape. Although tests have been carried out on the force required for this, and some FEA, i'm attempting to validate them numerically.
While I believe the cylinder can be modelled as large helix/spring with one revolution, I cannot find any formulas relating this to a rectangular x-sectional helix.
Is modelling this as a combined bending and torsion problem, in order to determine vertical deflection/force possible, or is it too complex?
Thanks in advance