nr4
Mechanical
- Jun 2, 2008
- 4
I am working on a spring button assembly as shown in the sketch. It can be visualized as the same principal used to support a coil spring in a car’s coil-over shock assembly. Originally it was designed on thumb-suck values and therefore overdesigned to prevent failure. It forms part of a pneumatic actuator safety return. It is shown in figure.(A)
I need to minimize the materials used and still be on the safe side of material failure. This is done to save both weight and manufacturing cost. The rod should be minimized in diameter, but this is not my main concern. The button plate should be minimized in thickness. The button itself is machined from a large billet and the thread extends past the flat surface of the plate. Any material from the surface to the thread end is removed and wasted, so a decrease in required thread length will help considerably. This I can solve with general thread calculations.
Q.1) Now, my biggest problem is spring forces (F) on the button plate. Can this be assumed to be uniformly annular, or is there some isolated pressure area (A) where the top coil of the spring is in contact with the button plate, causing an uneven moment around the rod end in the direction of the Z-axis ? (shown in figure.(B))
Q.2) If this is the case? How do I solve the problem? Should I consider it as a simply supported beam? The problem is, it’s not so simple. Not like half the button is clamped in a wall, it’s screwed on a stick.
Q.3) If this is not the case, and the force distribution is actually annular, it seems equally hard to solve the problem. How do I approach it in this manner?
Extra info: All dimensions are metric and in millimeter. The spring exerts a maximum force 24600N. The button plate is made of 300WA steel (a South African standard). I can get more info on the springs if appropriate.
Any help will be greatly appreciated
Regards
Nr.4
I need to minimize the materials used and still be on the safe side of material failure. This is done to save both weight and manufacturing cost. The rod should be minimized in diameter, but this is not my main concern. The button plate should be minimized in thickness. The button itself is machined from a large billet and the thread extends past the flat surface of the plate. Any material from the surface to the thread end is removed and wasted, so a decrease in required thread length will help considerably. This I can solve with general thread calculations.
Q.1) Now, my biggest problem is spring forces (F) on the button plate. Can this be assumed to be uniformly annular, or is there some isolated pressure area (A) where the top coil of the spring is in contact with the button plate, causing an uneven moment around the rod end in the direction of the Z-axis ? (shown in figure.(B))
Q.2) If this is the case? How do I solve the problem? Should I consider it as a simply supported beam? The problem is, it’s not so simple. Not like half the button is clamped in a wall, it’s screwed on a stick.
Q.3) If this is not the case, and the force distribution is actually annular, it seems equally hard to solve the problem. How do I approach it in this manner?
Extra info: All dimensions are metric and in millimeter. The spring exerts a maximum force 24600N. The button plate is made of 300WA steel (a South African standard). I can get more info on the springs if appropriate.
Any help will be greatly appreciated
Regards
Nr.4