GregPerry
Mechanical
- Jan 7, 2002
- 44
We have a number of gearboxes installed in 1991, since then 10 shafts have failed by means of fatigue.
The failures happen at two positions. I have calculated the following stresses based on the material and shaft geometry:
Position 1: Stress = 67 MPa, Endurance Limit = 82 MPa @ 10^6 cycles
Position 2: Stress = 65 MPa, Endurance Limit = 137 MPa @ 10^6 cycles
According to the calculations the shaft should not fail.
The material used is BS970 817M40 condition T. Testing reveals the following:
UTS = 1089 MPa specification 850-1000MPa
Yield = 932 MPa specification 650 MPa min.
Elongation = 16 specification 13 min
impact resistance= 26 specification 35 min (under)
cleanliness ASTM E45 A=2, B=0, C=2-3, D=1
Grain size ASTM E112 size 5-6
My questions are:
1. Could the material condition reduce the endurance limit of the material to such an extent that fatigue failure would be garanteed?
2. Is there a graph, index or reference literature that shows some correlation between material cleanliness and fatige life and/or grain size and fatigue life.
Thanks,
Greg
The failures happen at two positions. I have calculated the following stresses based on the material and shaft geometry:
Position 1: Stress = 67 MPa, Endurance Limit = 82 MPa @ 10^6 cycles
Position 2: Stress = 65 MPa, Endurance Limit = 137 MPa @ 10^6 cycles
According to the calculations the shaft should not fail.
The material used is BS970 817M40 condition T. Testing reveals the following:
UTS = 1089 MPa specification 850-1000MPa
Yield = 932 MPa specification 650 MPa min.
Elongation = 16 specification 13 min
impact resistance= 26 specification 35 min (under)
cleanliness ASTM E45 A=2, B=0, C=2-3, D=1
Grain size ASTM E112 size 5-6
My questions are:
1. Could the material condition reduce the endurance limit of the material to such an extent that fatigue failure would be garanteed?
2. Is there a graph, index or reference literature that shows some correlation between material cleanliness and fatige life and/or grain size and fatigue life.
Thanks,
Greg