gfdoug
Mechanical
- Aug 18, 2014
- 21
All -
I am currently in the process of designing a piping system that offloads LNG from a railcar. The simplified version of this is that I have an 8" pipe with a swivel-arm setup that can attach to the railcars as they approach to offload. I am currently creating a stress analyis model within Bentley Autopipe and I'm running in to problems of how to properly represent this system.
The problem is that the swivel-arm can rotate which makes the moment caused by the weight of the swivel arm at the pipe to go from a bending moment (when the swivel arm is fully in-line with the pipe) to a torsional moment (when the swivel arm is fully perpindicular to the pipe).
The approximate moment that the swivel arm creates has been decided to be 1900 ft-lbs at the inlet connection when acting in-line.
It has been suggested to input a 1900 ft-lb bending and 1900 ft-lb torsional moment, but this will not be an accurate representation of what will be occuring - most likely it will by some resultant of 1900 ft-lbs acting in a non-uniform direction. Can anyone with experience in stress analysis or in AutoPIPE guide me on how to correctly model this?
Thank you.
I am currently in the process of designing a piping system that offloads LNG from a railcar. The simplified version of this is that I have an 8" pipe with a swivel-arm setup that can attach to the railcars as they approach to offload. I am currently creating a stress analyis model within Bentley Autopipe and I'm running in to problems of how to properly represent this system.
The problem is that the swivel-arm can rotate which makes the moment caused by the weight of the swivel arm at the pipe to go from a bending moment (when the swivel arm is fully in-line with the pipe) to a torsional moment (when the swivel arm is fully perpindicular to the pipe).
The approximate moment that the swivel arm creates has been decided to be 1900 ft-lbs at the inlet connection when acting in-line.
It has been suggested to input a 1900 ft-lb bending and 1900 ft-lb torsional moment, but this will not be an accurate representation of what will be occuring - most likely it will by some resultant of 1900 ft-lbs acting in a non-uniform direction. Can anyone with experience in stress analysis or in AutoPIPE guide me on how to correctly model this?
Thank you.