JanEngineer
Mechanical
- May 11, 2017
- 10
Hi all,
Currently I am doing some calculations which involve shear forces in pins (retrieved from FEA). The maximum shear factor for a round pin would be 4/3. However I am wondering if this also applies for pins with in plane shear. The pins are forced into a hole and connect two flanges. There is no clearance between the pin and the hole.
The maximum shear factor applies to the axial shear stress. However, because moment equilibrium this would also be the shear stress in transverse direction. In this case however I don't see the axial shear stress to be an issue. Is it therefore okay to use the average shear stress instead?
Could anyone offer some clarification? Preferably I would like to have an answer that can point to a norm or some sort of authority such that I can clarify why I don't use the shear factor.
Thanks in advance!
Currently I am doing some calculations which involve shear forces in pins (retrieved from FEA). The maximum shear factor for a round pin would be 4/3. However I am wondering if this also applies for pins with in plane shear. The pins are forced into a hole and connect two flanges. There is no clearance between the pin and the hole.
The maximum shear factor applies to the axial shear stress. However, because moment equilibrium this would also be the shear stress in transverse direction. In this case however I don't see the axial shear stress to be an issue. Is it therefore okay to use the average shear stress instead?
Could anyone offer some clarification? Preferably I would like to have an answer that can point to a norm or some sort of authority such that I can clarify why I don't use the shear factor.
Thanks in advance!