adamgnt
Mechanical
- Sep 25, 2009
- 24
Hello all,
I've inherited a project designed by a previous engineer (which we all love!) and am taking a second look at it, attempting to streamline some geometry. I've attached some images of a clevis hook used to gain a mechanical advantage by use of its lever arm. The hole shown is for a half inch bolt and the green arrow represents an external holding force. When the holding force is released it (should) allow the clevis to pivot counterclockwise and let go of the pin cradled between the hook and another vertical fixture.
My question concerns the bulk of material to the right of the pivot point. I don't see it adding anything structurally. I have seen similar geometry added in an attempt to balance the moment of inertia around the pivot point, however, in this application this is unnecessary. If anything I would want to it to naturally hang open (cradle facing down) if released with no external downward load. I did a real quick Solidworks stress test (which I realize is by no means a full FEA analysis) and it seemed to confirm that the material to the right is not being taxed by the downward load when in equilibrium (unreleased). Why should I keep this material in? Just looking for another set of eyes to help catch any oversights... Thanks!
I've inherited a project designed by a previous engineer (which we all love!) and am taking a second look at it, attempting to streamline some geometry. I've attached some images of a clevis hook used to gain a mechanical advantage by use of its lever arm. The hole shown is for a half inch bolt and the green arrow represents an external holding force. When the holding force is released it (should) allow the clevis to pivot counterclockwise and let go of the pin cradled between the hook and another vertical fixture.
My question concerns the bulk of material to the right of the pivot point. I don't see it adding anything structurally. I have seen similar geometry added in an attempt to balance the moment of inertia around the pivot point, however, in this application this is unnecessary. If anything I would want to it to naturally hang open (cradle facing down) if released with no external downward load. I did a real quick Solidworks stress test (which I realize is by no means a full FEA analysis) and it seemed to confirm that the material to the right is not being taxed by the downward load when in equilibrium (unreleased). Why should I keep this material in? Just looking for another set of eyes to help catch any oversights... Thanks!