dmalicky
Mechanical
- Aug 20, 2003
- 34
For thin-walled square and rectangular tubes, I'm trying to find a formula for the loss in bending strength due to local buckling in the compression 'flange' and side walls.
I've heard of heuristics like keeping (width/t) < 50 to avoid dimpling of the walls; I'm looking for something more specific.
For torsion of thin-walled round tubes (steel & aluminum), I found an approximate formula in Roark and Young:
'Loss Factor' = 1600 /(( (OD/t) - 2)^2 + 1600)
(p 318 of 5th ed... formula is from 1935)
but they don't have the equivalent for square & rectangular tubes in bending. According to that formula, there is a 20% loss in torsion strength when OD/t = 22. And 50% loss when OD/t = 42. Quite a lot for some common tubing.
Thanks for any leads.
I've heard of heuristics like keeping (width/t) < 50 to avoid dimpling of the walls; I'm looking for something more specific.
For torsion of thin-walled round tubes (steel & aluminum), I found an approximate formula in Roark and Young:
'Loss Factor' = 1600 /(( (OD/t) - 2)^2 + 1600)
(p 318 of 5th ed... formula is from 1935)
but they don't have the equivalent for square & rectangular tubes in bending. According to that formula, there is a 20% loss in torsion strength when OD/t = 22. And 50% loss when OD/t = 42. Quite a lot for some common tubing.
Thanks for any leads.