futureguy
Materials
- Sep 1, 2011
- 7
Hello all, long time reader first time poster.
I am prototyping a sporting goods product that requires a flat cantilever spring approximately 6 inches long. Mounted rigidly, and supporting a rigid bolt at the free end, the "flex zone" between these elements is actually only 2.25" long. I chose extruded polycarbonate plate for beta testing purposes due to it's high flexural strength to stiffness ratio (Fb/E), and the proper size seems to be around 3/8" thick and 2-3" wide (I=0.011 in^4, E*I= 4,125 lb*in^2). The cantilever loads are typically 0-75 pounds, and may be up to 200 pounds, with thousands of cycles. To give you an idea: under a 80lb load, the spring deflects about 12 degrees.
The PC is performing beautifully but eventually breaking, assumably from fatigue and high impact loads (although the impact is not directly to the PC part itself).
For purposes of continuing beta testing, is there a more reliable plastic that will remain elastic under these high deformations but not fracture catastrophically? ABS, Delrin, HDPE...all seem to be less favorable "on paper" but maybe are less prone to this brittle fracture failure?
I have begun to look at composites and spring steel as well. A leaf spring in a vehicle suspension is the best real world example I can find of a very sturdy flat spring, but I'm not sure if such a material could provide enough flex over only 2.25" unsupported length.
Thanks in advance for any advice
I am prototyping a sporting goods product that requires a flat cantilever spring approximately 6 inches long. Mounted rigidly, and supporting a rigid bolt at the free end, the "flex zone" between these elements is actually only 2.25" long. I chose extruded polycarbonate plate for beta testing purposes due to it's high flexural strength to stiffness ratio (Fb/E), and the proper size seems to be around 3/8" thick and 2-3" wide (I=0.011 in^4, E*I= 4,125 lb*in^2). The cantilever loads are typically 0-75 pounds, and may be up to 200 pounds, with thousands of cycles. To give you an idea: under a 80lb load, the spring deflects about 12 degrees.
The PC is performing beautifully but eventually breaking, assumably from fatigue and high impact loads (although the impact is not directly to the PC part itself).
For purposes of continuing beta testing, is there a more reliable plastic that will remain elastic under these high deformations but not fracture catastrophically? ABS, Delrin, HDPE...all seem to be less favorable "on paper" but maybe are less prone to this brittle fracture failure?
I have begun to look at composites and spring steel as well. A leaf spring in a vehicle suspension is the best real world example I can find of a very sturdy flat spring, but I'm not sure if such a material could provide enough flex over only 2.25" unsupported length.
Thanks in advance for any advice