Synesthesia
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2012
- 6
I often go through the following design process and have been looking for ways to improve the performance of my designs. Perhaps you folks might have some insight!
I have two aluminum parts that are mated together through the use of screws and tapped holes. I am trying to make a design that is as small/light as possible while also withstanding high shear loads. Often I also have geometric constraints that limit the size of fasteners. So the problem I wind up with is how many 2-56 screws do I need to take this load? I usually put a comfortable factor of safety on the screws failing in shear and go ahead and hand tighten the screws. Often this works but sometimes I break screws while tightening and sometimes my design is over-built.
So I thought ah I should pull out my Machinery's Handbook and finally build a nice chart for estimating shear friction and tightening torque. I did this and it looks great but the problem that I'm running into is that tightening torques are very small and very sensitive to friction coefficients. A) Torque wrenches seem to be a poor (or very expensive) choice for these low torques and B) if I put what I think is a reasonable factor of safety on my torque due to friction uncertainty, it looks like I will have to over-build everything!
Anyway, any suggestions on how I can improve my process here? Thank you.
I have two aluminum parts that are mated together through the use of screws and tapped holes. I am trying to make a design that is as small/light as possible while also withstanding high shear loads. Often I also have geometric constraints that limit the size of fasteners. So the problem I wind up with is how many 2-56 screws do I need to take this load? I usually put a comfortable factor of safety on the screws failing in shear and go ahead and hand tighten the screws. Often this works but sometimes I break screws while tightening and sometimes my design is over-built.
So I thought ah I should pull out my Machinery's Handbook and finally build a nice chart for estimating shear friction and tightening torque. I did this and it looks great but the problem that I'm running into is that tightening torques are very small and very sensitive to friction coefficients. A) Torque wrenches seem to be a poor (or very expensive) choice for these low torques and B) if I put what I think is a reasonable factor of safety on my torque due to friction uncertainty, it looks like I will have to over-build everything!
Anyway, any suggestions on how I can improve my process here? Thank you.