alex_mech_12358
Mechanical
- Mar 11, 2021
- 3
Hi,
I am currently designing a flywheel. The flywheel will connect to a shaft flange by using a concentrically locating shoulder on the flywheel that locates on the flange OD, 1 dowel pin that will be a slip fit to clock the flywheel and a number of bolts on a BCD to provide a clamping force between the flywheel face and the flange. The clamping force will transmit all the torque load.
Details as follows:
Clamping Bolts BCD = 80mm
Number of Bolts = 4
Design Torque = 300Nm (includes design factor of 5)
Ideal Bolt PreLoad Stress = 800MPa (Unbrako Catlogue)
Friction Coeff = 0.61 (aluminium to steel - clean and dry) (using 0.15 for greasy steel doesnt change selected bolt size)
Effective Friction Radius = 40mm (calculated based on eqn 9.42 Design of Machine Elements Textbook)
Minimum Required Bolt diameter = 2.4mm
Selected bolt Diameter = M5
Also...
Max Flywheel Speed = 7000rpm
Flywheel OD = 340mm
Mass - 4.5kg
I believe my calcs are correct but the 4 x M5 bolts seems very small. I've been looking at car engine flywheels which are a fairly similar size and mass and operate at a similar speed and they all have 6 x M10 bolts or something around that. Im worried that my calcs dont take into account the high flywheel speed. Am i overlooking an additional load? Are the engine flywheels connections accounting for vibration with a large design factor? I should also note that this flywheel will have a very constant torque load - no pulsing as its in an electric motor.
Any help would be much appeciated!
Thanks!
Alex - Junior Mech Engineer
I am currently designing a flywheel. The flywheel will connect to a shaft flange by using a concentrically locating shoulder on the flywheel that locates on the flange OD, 1 dowel pin that will be a slip fit to clock the flywheel and a number of bolts on a BCD to provide a clamping force between the flywheel face and the flange. The clamping force will transmit all the torque load.
Details as follows:
Clamping Bolts BCD = 80mm
Number of Bolts = 4
Design Torque = 300Nm (includes design factor of 5)
Ideal Bolt PreLoad Stress = 800MPa (Unbrako Catlogue)
Friction Coeff = 0.61 (aluminium to steel - clean and dry) (using 0.15 for greasy steel doesnt change selected bolt size)
Effective Friction Radius = 40mm (calculated based on eqn 9.42 Design of Machine Elements Textbook)
Minimum Required Bolt diameter = 2.4mm
Selected bolt Diameter = M5
Also...
Max Flywheel Speed = 7000rpm
Flywheel OD = 340mm
Mass - 4.5kg
I believe my calcs are correct but the 4 x M5 bolts seems very small. I've been looking at car engine flywheels which are a fairly similar size and mass and operate at a similar speed and they all have 6 x M10 bolts or something around that. Im worried that my calcs dont take into account the high flywheel speed. Am i overlooking an additional load? Are the engine flywheels connections accounting for vibration with a large design factor? I should also note that this flywheel will have a very constant torque load - no pulsing as its in an electric motor.
Any help would be much appeciated!
Thanks!
Alex - Junior Mech Engineer