JordanL
Mechanical
- May 24, 2012
- 8
Hi Everyone,
I am trying to measure torsion in a thin walled tube (6.750" OD, 6.500" ID). The tube is also subjected to bending and compression.
I purchased some shear strain gauges and have nothing but nice things to say about the gages themselves. I mounted them 180 degrees apart on the shaft in line with the axis of the shaft in a 4 arm wheatstone bridge. I took great care to align these gages, and have no reason to suspect misalignment to be the cause of my problems.
When I hook up the gages to the strain meter, they register torsion just fine, and we have been able to calibrate our setup very accurately. The problem is that when we apply a bending load to this tube, we get a torsion reading. This seems non-physical as any shear from the bending load should be compensated out in a 4 arm bridge.
I have checked all my wiring, and tried mounting new gages, but got the same result.
Any thoughts on what might be causing this, or what I could try next?
Thanks!
I am trying to measure torsion in a thin walled tube (6.750" OD, 6.500" ID). The tube is also subjected to bending and compression.
I purchased some shear strain gauges and have nothing but nice things to say about the gages themselves. I mounted them 180 degrees apart on the shaft in line with the axis of the shaft in a 4 arm wheatstone bridge. I took great care to align these gages, and have no reason to suspect misalignment to be the cause of my problems.
When I hook up the gages to the strain meter, they register torsion just fine, and we have been able to calibrate our setup very accurately. The problem is that when we apply a bending load to this tube, we get a torsion reading. This seems non-physical as any shear from the bending load should be compensated out in a 4 arm bridge.
I have checked all my wiring, and tried mounting new gages, but got the same result.
Any thoughts on what might be causing this, or what I could try next?
Thanks!