Zach125
Aerospace
- Dec 5, 2013
- 5
First post on Eng-Tips!
This is as much a question as it is something I'd like to get a discussion going on. I'll phrase it like a question:
When bending sheetmetal, the material at the bend has clearly been stressed past the yield stress but less than the ultimate/failure stress. So there are residual stresses at the bend and material has yielded before the part is ever loaded.
When analyzing a part for structural integrity, is it appropriate/prudent/good practice to consider this residual stress/yielding? Or is it ignored to make the problem more manageable? Does anyone have experience either way?
This is as much a question as it is something I'd like to get a discussion going on. I'll phrase it like a question:
When bending sheetmetal, the material at the bend has clearly been stressed past the yield stress but less than the ultimate/failure stress. So there are residual stresses at the bend and material has yielded before the part is ever loaded.
When analyzing a part for structural integrity, is it appropriate/prudent/good practice to consider this residual stress/yielding? Or is it ignored to make the problem more manageable? Does anyone have experience either way?