evilspeeder
Mechanical
- May 13, 2009
- 7
Hi all, I'm trying to design a rotating shaft for a large piece of machinery. It is supported by two bearings with a scoop mounted to the middle of the shaft between the bearings. The scoop is perpendicular to the shaft so that as the shaft rotates the scoop sweeps material away. It is driven off a gearmotor attached to the shaft at one end (outside the bearings). The shaft will obviously see torsion from acceleration and braking of the rotating mass, and it will see fully reversed bending from the weight of the scoop and it will also have an axial force and moment from material hitting the side of the scoop (parallel to the axis of the shaft).
This axial force is what has me stumped. I don't think I can use ASME B106.1. Should I use that to get it close and just check for buckling after? Is there a separate method for a shaft with complex loading?
Thanks,
John
This axial force is what has me stumped. I don't think I can use ASME B106.1. Should I use that to get it close and just check for buckling after? Is there a separate method for a shaft with complex loading?
Thanks,
John