juddster94
Mechanical
- Mar 22, 2008
- 4
I am designing a rotary transfer device to transfer a 40ft tube from one conveyor to another. The device is 5 arms pivoting around a central shaft (I'm sizing the central shaft). See attached picture.
I am using the following equation to calculate the shaft diameter and I'd like any comments if anyone sees any errors in my calculations.
d^3=(16/(pi*Ss))*Sqrt((KbMb)^2+(KtMt)^2)
d = diameter of the shaft
Ss = allowable stress - I am using 6000 psi
Kt & Kb = Combined shock & fatigue factor applied to the torsional and bending moment. Kb=2.0 and Kt=1.5
Mt & Mb = torsional and bending moment
The entire assembly consists of 3 shafts, 174", 240" and 36" connected with a hub at each end. The arms and supports are at 0", 60", 180", 300" and 420". The pockets for the tube are on a 27" radius. The mass of the arm is 301 lbs each with a total of 5 arms with a total mass of 1505 lbs. The mass of the tube being transfered is 2136 lbs. The rotation starts with the arm horizontal at rest, picking up the tube and rotating through 180 degree's. The acceleration of the arm is from 0 to 6 rpm through pi/6 radians=.376 rad/s^2. The horizontal force due to acceleration I've calculated at Fn=mr'w = (3641 lb)(16/12 ft)(.376 rad/s^2)=1830 lbf or 367 lbf at each arm. The center of gravity of the arm is at the shaft and the shaft rotates at 6 rpm so I've calculated the HP required to rotate the tube through 180 degree's is
HP=F*r*N/63000=2136*27*6/63000=5.5 HP
I will put a 7.5HP motor on it. One question though, since the arm is loaded on one side only, should I include the mass of that half of the arm in my HP calculation?
I've calculated that my maximum bending moment as sqrt(Mbv^2+Mbh^2)=23068 lb-in. One question is should I calculate the bending moment on each shaft or should I calculate the system as a whole? I've done each shaft independently. I've positioned the drive near the 3rd arm/support assembly but attached to the 2nd shaft. So my bending moment free body diagram for the 174" shaft is 3 simple supports at 0", 60" and 174" (the third support is actually on the 2nd shaft). The vertical forces are two 750 lb loads acting down at 12" and 72" and two horizontal forces as a result of angular acceleration at 366 lbf at the same locations.
d=(16/pi*6000)*sqrt((2*Mb)^2+(1.5*Mt)^2))^(1/3)
= 0.000849*sqrt((2*8871)^2+(1.5*23068)^2)^(1/3)
= 3.207 = 3.5" dia shaft
Angle rotation = 584*Mt*L/(G*d^4)
= 584*23068*174/(12x10^6*3.5^4) = 1.3 degrees = 0.089 degrees / ft
Any assistance with this is greatly appreciated.
Best regards,
Judd
I am using the following equation to calculate the shaft diameter and I'd like any comments if anyone sees any errors in my calculations.
d^3=(16/(pi*Ss))*Sqrt((KbMb)^2+(KtMt)^2)
d = diameter of the shaft
Ss = allowable stress - I am using 6000 psi
Kt & Kb = Combined shock & fatigue factor applied to the torsional and bending moment. Kb=2.0 and Kt=1.5
Mt & Mb = torsional and bending moment
The entire assembly consists of 3 shafts, 174", 240" and 36" connected with a hub at each end. The arms and supports are at 0", 60", 180", 300" and 420". The pockets for the tube are on a 27" radius. The mass of the arm is 301 lbs each with a total of 5 arms with a total mass of 1505 lbs. The mass of the tube being transfered is 2136 lbs. The rotation starts with the arm horizontal at rest, picking up the tube and rotating through 180 degree's. The acceleration of the arm is from 0 to 6 rpm through pi/6 radians=.376 rad/s^2. The horizontal force due to acceleration I've calculated at Fn=mr'w = (3641 lb)(16/12 ft)(.376 rad/s^2)=1830 lbf or 367 lbf at each arm. The center of gravity of the arm is at the shaft and the shaft rotates at 6 rpm so I've calculated the HP required to rotate the tube through 180 degree's is
HP=F*r*N/63000=2136*27*6/63000=5.5 HP
I will put a 7.5HP motor on it. One question though, since the arm is loaded on one side only, should I include the mass of that half of the arm in my HP calculation?
I've calculated that my maximum bending moment as sqrt(Mbv^2+Mbh^2)=23068 lb-in. One question is should I calculate the bending moment on each shaft or should I calculate the system as a whole? I've done each shaft independently. I've positioned the drive near the 3rd arm/support assembly but attached to the 2nd shaft. So my bending moment free body diagram for the 174" shaft is 3 simple supports at 0", 60" and 174" (the third support is actually on the 2nd shaft). The vertical forces are two 750 lb loads acting down at 12" and 72" and two horizontal forces as a result of angular acceleration at 366 lbf at the same locations.
d=(16/pi*6000)*sqrt((2*Mb)^2+(1.5*Mt)^2))^(1/3)
= 0.000849*sqrt((2*8871)^2+(1.5*23068)^2)^(1/3)
= 3.207 = 3.5" dia shaft
Angle rotation = 584*Mt*L/(G*d^4)
= 584*23068*174/(12x10^6*3.5^4) = 1.3 degrees = 0.089 degrees / ft
Any assistance with this is greatly appreciated.
Best regards,
Judd