brmech
Mechanical
- Dec 14, 2000
- 13
I have a mechanism that can be modeled as a crank-slider mechanism. An external force acts on the rigid body, that is the modeled as the slider, causes the body to rotate and translate while it is translating along the slider path. The rotation is equivalent to the rotation of the connecting rod rotation.
Is it correct to evaluate the instantaneous torque that causes this rigid body rotation as the moment from the external force about the instantaneous center of rotation?
Assume no friction or inertia.
Is it correct to evaluate the instantaneous torque that causes this rigid body rotation as the moment from the external force about the instantaneous center of rotation?
Assume no friction or inertia.