macoovacany
New member
- Feb 3, 2002
- 25
Hello all,
Consider a crack in the middle of large sheet of metal, about the same dimensions as, say, the sidewalls of the engine bay mount for the Cessna 210. The crack was probably initiated by a tool scratch, falling screw driver, whatever. There is now a crack that runs at approximately 45 degrees to the vertical about 1-1/2" long.
From this level of information, can we determine the direction of principle stresses? Does the mode of the crack matter? Would the direction of the crack depend on the Shear/Axial stresses? Would this mode change with a different material, i.e. different ratio of shear strength to axial strength. Would the direction of the crack change with a different material?
The reason I ask is that by removing material 'in front of' the crack (a series of decreasing circles, the axis along the line of principal stress), the stress concentration at the crack tip can be reduced dramatically.
Not that that is what we approved for the particular problem above (stop drill crack, doubler 1 gauge thicker than parent material, etc: standard stuff). I'm asking just in case a problem comes along that may require a solution where the standard stuff may not be approriate. In summary, got crack, want to know stress direction.
Timbo
Consider a crack in the middle of large sheet of metal, about the same dimensions as, say, the sidewalls of the engine bay mount for the Cessna 210. The crack was probably initiated by a tool scratch, falling screw driver, whatever. There is now a crack that runs at approximately 45 degrees to the vertical about 1-1/2" long.
From this level of information, can we determine the direction of principle stresses? Does the mode of the crack matter? Would the direction of the crack depend on the Shear/Axial stresses? Would this mode change with a different material, i.e. different ratio of shear strength to axial strength. Would the direction of the crack change with a different material?
The reason I ask is that by removing material 'in front of' the crack (a series of decreasing circles, the axis along the line of principal stress), the stress concentration at the crack tip can be reduced dramatically.
Not that that is what we approved for the particular problem above (stop drill crack, doubler 1 gauge thicker than parent material, etc: standard stuff). I'm asking just in case a problem comes along that may require a solution where the standard stuff may not be approriate. In summary, got crack, want to know stress direction.
Timbo