electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
Here's a coupling I'm looking at:
Bendix type diaphram coupling
7600 rpm
Total Coupling weight (hubs plus spacer) - 23 pounds
Imbalance tolerance in each plane is 4*W/N = 4*23/7600 ~ 0.01 inch-ounce ~ 0.3 inch-gram
The coupling includes 12 nuts and 12 bolts in each balance plane, at a radius of approx 3" from rotational axis. The vendor states each nut is controlled to within 0.05 grams and each bolt is controlled to within 0.05 grams. The vendor instructions state that the position of the nuts and bolts does not need to be controlled. The vendor will will assemble the coupling at their facility and perform balance, then they will disassemble and ship to us with the nuts and bolts not labeled for which position they belong to. We don't plan to (don't want to) perform any balance check on site.
That is their plan. Their plan does not seem reasonable to me since the fastener tolerance might easily exceed the balance tolerance.
I haven't had a chance to talk to them yet, but I'd like to be prepared when I get my opportunity to talk to them.
The 0.3 inch gram balance tolerance when considered at a 3" radius translates to 0.1g.
If they happen to balance with a +0.05g nut and +0.05g bolt at 12:00 position and -0.05g nut and -0.05g bolt at 6:00 position, and then we reassemble with these four pieces swapped, we have change in balance of 2*0.05 at each of 4 positions at a 3" radius or 1.2 g-inch... blows away our balance tolerance of 0.3g-inch.
I realize this exact scenario is very unlikely, but it's unsettling that by just changing position of 4 out of 24 fasteners potentially exceeds our imbalance tolerance. I'd like to be able to evaluate or understand it better.
MY QUESTIONS ARE AS FOLLOWS:
Q1 - Does above approach proposed by vendor seem reasonable or unreasonable?
Q2 - If you were going to attempt to establish a balance tolerance for the nuts and bolts in this situation, how would you do it?
Here's my initial rough attempt at item Q2
If we assumed N pieces with normal weight distribution and a standard deviation of sigma = S and , then the standard deviation of the scalar sum of the weights of the N pieces by central limit theorem is N*S/sqrt(N) = sqrt(N)*S.
In our case N=24 and the deviation of the scalar sum of weights is [sqrt(24)*S] ~ 5*S.
So far we are dealing with scalar sum and I don't know how to translate it to vector sum, but it seems reasonable (conservative?) to estimate the standard deviation of the vector sum (of unbalances) as the [standard deviation of the scalar sum of weights] times the radius.
[sqrt(N) * S] * R <= Balance Tolerance
[sqrt(24) * S] * 3*inch <= 0.3 gram*inch
S <= 0.3/(3*sqrt24) ~ 0.1/5 = 0.02 gram
Accordingly I will propose that the vendor either control the tolerance of each nut and each bolt to 0.02gram or else label the position of each nut and bolt.
Does this make sense?
Is there a better way to do statistical vector sum to estimate the effects of individual piece variability on overall unbalance?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?
Bendix type diaphram coupling
7600 rpm
Total Coupling weight (hubs plus spacer) - 23 pounds
Imbalance tolerance in each plane is 4*W/N = 4*23/7600 ~ 0.01 inch-ounce ~ 0.3 inch-gram
The coupling includes 12 nuts and 12 bolts in each balance plane, at a radius of approx 3" from rotational axis. The vendor states each nut is controlled to within 0.05 grams and each bolt is controlled to within 0.05 grams. The vendor instructions state that the position of the nuts and bolts does not need to be controlled. The vendor will will assemble the coupling at their facility and perform balance, then they will disassemble and ship to us with the nuts and bolts not labeled for which position they belong to. We don't plan to (don't want to) perform any balance check on site.
That is their plan. Their plan does not seem reasonable to me since the fastener tolerance might easily exceed the balance tolerance.
I haven't had a chance to talk to them yet, but I'd like to be prepared when I get my opportunity to talk to them.
The 0.3 inch gram balance tolerance when considered at a 3" radius translates to 0.1g.
If they happen to balance with a +0.05g nut and +0.05g bolt at 12:00 position and -0.05g nut and -0.05g bolt at 6:00 position, and then we reassemble with these four pieces swapped, we have change in balance of 2*0.05 at each of 4 positions at a 3" radius or 1.2 g-inch... blows away our balance tolerance of 0.3g-inch.
I realize this exact scenario is very unlikely, but it's unsettling that by just changing position of 4 out of 24 fasteners potentially exceeds our imbalance tolerance. I'd like to be able to evaluate or understand it better.
MY QUESTIONS ARE AS FOLLOWS:
Q1 - Does above approach proposed by vendor seem reasonable or unreasonable?
Q2 - If you were going to attempt to establish a balance tolerance for the nuts and bolts in this situation, how would you do it?
Here's my initial rough attempt at item Q2
If we assumed N pieces with normal weight distribution and a standard deviation of sigma = S and , then the standard deviation of the scalar sum of the weights of the N pieces by central limit theorem is N*S/sqrt(N) = sqrt(N)*S.
In our case N=24 and the deviation of the scalar sum of weights is [sqrt(24)*S] ~ 5*S.
So far we are dealing with scalar sum and I don't know how to translate it to vector sum, but it seems reasonable (conservative?) to estimate the standard deviation of the vector sum (of unbalances) as the [standard deviation of the scalar sum of weights] times the radius.
[sqrt(N) * S] * R <= Balance Tolerance
[sqrt(24) * S] * 3*inch <= 0.3 gram*inch
S <= 0.3/(3*sqrt24) ~ 0.1/5 = 0.02 gram
Accordingly I will propose that the vendor either control the tolerance of each nut and each bolt to 0.02gram or else label the position of each nut and bolt.
Does this make sense?
Is there a better way to do statistical vector sum to estimate the effects of individual piece variability on overall unbalance?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?