mathlete7
Aerospace
- Sep 13, 2008
- 52
Back in my Boeing days I remember that in their Boeing Design Manual (BDM) as well as corresponding IAS tool they had a Johnson-Euler buckling tool. You could select how many "supported edges" the given cross-section had (1 for a "tee" and 2 for a "zee", for example). If you selected "1 supported edge" it would do a standard Johnson-Euler calc because buckling of one of the legs would occur basically simultaneously as global buckling. If there was more than one supported edge you had to enter additional information and it would calculate buckling of each leg and use this in the resulting calc (global buckling a function of local buckling strengths of each leg).
Well, I'm no longer at Boeing and am looking at doing a Johnson-Euler type calc for a cross-section with a couple supported edges. Does anyone know where Boeing got their method from? Do Roark/Bruhn/Niu discuss this? Seems like all I can find are standard Johnson-Euler methods where all you need is a crippling allowable and section properties (area, MOI, E).
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks...
Well, I'm no longer at Boeing and am looking at doing a Johnson-Euler type calc for a cross-section with a couple supported edges. Does anyone know where Boeing got their method from? Do Roark/Bruhn/Niu discuss this? Seems like all I can find are standard Johnson-Euler methods where all you need is a crippling allowable and section properties (area, MOI, E).
Any help is appreciated.
Thanks...