Hokie93
Structural
- Sep 9, 2007
- 375
I'm looking for assistance in determining the ultimate torsion capacity of a square steel shaft (1.75" x 1.75", ASTM A29 material). The minimum yield stress is 90 ksi. According my advanced mechanics of materials textbook (Boresi et al, 5th edition), the plastic torsion capacity for this shape is 8/3*shear yield stress*(1.75"/2)^3. The result is approximately 8000 ft-lbs. I am using 0.6Fy as the shear yield stress. When comparing my result to published values from A.B. Chance Company for their helical anchor products, the maximum listed torque for a 1.75" square shaft is 10,000 ft-lbs or 11,000 ft-lbs (both values appear in their literature).
Can anyone shed light on the apparent discrepancy? Is my formual incorrect or might the A.B. Chance torque limits be based on actual testing rather than theoretical formulas?
Hokie93
Can anyone shed light on the apparent discrepancy? Is my formual incorrect or might the A.B. Chance torque limits be based on actual testing rather than theoretical formulas?
Hokie93