swilkins2
Mechanical
- Sep 3, 2009
- 2
Greetings-
My customer would like to make cut outs to the nose bulkhead. They are trying to put more more avionics into their nose cone. Therefore, after the cut outs are made, they will put cannon plugs, usb and ethernet plugs into a piece of sheet metal and rivet that into the where the cut out is. What sort of analysis is appropriate? The bulkhead is a pressure bulkhead. The max pressure is 8 psig. Since it is a nose bulkhead, the pressure is applied to the flat shear web. The thickness of he bulkhead .025" and it is 2024-T3. I am planning on analyzing the riveted joint to make sure that it doesn't fail. The load that I will look at is the Pressure (8 psi)*Surface Area of repair area. Also, I will make sure that I recommend that that the material that my customer mounts their connectors into is the same thickness as that of what they removed. Any suggestions woudl be appreciated.
Thanks,
-SW
My customer would like to make cut outs to the nose bulkhead. They are trying to put more more avionics into their nose cone. Therefore, after the cut outs are made, they will put cannon plugs, usb and ethernet plugs into a piece of sheet metal and rivet that into the where the cut out is. What sort of analysis is appropriate? The bulkhead is a pressure bulkhead. The max pressure is 8 psig. Since it is a nose bulkhead, the pressure is applied to the flat shear web. The thickness of he bulkhead .025" and it is 2024-T3. I am planning on analyzing the riveted joint to make sure that it doesn't fail. The load that I will look at is the Pressure (8 psi)*Surface Area of repair area. Also, I will make sure that I recommend that that the material that my customer mounts their connectors into is the same thickness as that of what they removed. Any suggestions woudl be appreciated.
Thanks,
-SW