kcjBoiler
Chemical
- Aug 15, 2002
- 7
Hi,
It's been a while since I've posted. I have a question and I haven't flexed my physics brain in a while. Hopefully someone can answer me. I have a question about pull force. I'm sticking a plastic cylinder insider another plastic cylinder so that the two cylinders stay together. I'm trying to achieve a specific pull force specification, meaning I want them to stick together, but they can pull part at "X" lbs of pull force. My current cylinder design is at half of the pull force needed. My question is, is there a way to calculate how much further I need to push the inside cylinder into the outside cylinder? Is it twice as much? 1/4 as much? I'm sure there is an easy equation for it, I'm just not 100% sure what that is. It's the distance I'm after.
It's been a while since I've posted. I have a question and I haven't flexed my physics brain in a while. Hopefully someone can answer me. I have a question about pull force. I'm sticking a plastic cylinder insider another plastic cylinder so that the two cylinders stay together. I'm trying to achieve a specific pull force specification, meaning I want them to stick together, but they can pull part at "X" lbs of pull force. My current cylinder design is at half of the pull force needed. My question is, is there a way to calculate how much further I need to push the inside cylinder into the outside cylinder? Is it twice as much? 1/4 as much? I'm sure there is an easy equation for it, I'm just not 100% sure what that is. It's the distance I'm after.