deangardner
Aerospace
- Apr 1, 2009
- 16
I have a mathematical problem…
I’m trying to work out what the cross section of a Torus would be once it has been stretched over a shaft. So, for a given temperature the volume of the Torus would be the same no matter what amount of stretch you impart on the inside diameter. So the volume of a Torus is:
V = pi.r^2 x pi.Dmean (where r = Torus cross-section radius and Dmean equals the chord diameter of the Torus)
The problem is that I only know the inside diameter of the shaft that the torus has to be stretched onto and not what the chord diameter that the torus will end up being. If you rearrange for r, you get:
r^2 = v/pi^2.Dmean
The problem is that you only know what the inside diameter of Dmean is. Which is:
Dinside + ((Doutside – Dinside) / 2)
But I don’t know what Doutside is…
Can this problem be solved..?
I’m trying to work out what the cross section of a Torus would be once it has been stretched over a shaft. So, for a given temperature the volume of the Torus would be the same no matter what amount of stretch you impart on the inside diameter. So the volume of a Torus is:
V = pi.r^2 x pi.Dmean (where r = Torus cross-section radius and Dmean equals the chord diameter of the Torus)
The problem is that I only know the inside diameter of the shaft that the torus has to be stretched onto and not what the chord diameter that the torus will end up being. If you rearrange for r, you get:
r^2 = v/pi^2.Dmean
The problem is that you only know what the inside diameter of Dmean is. Which is:
Dinside + ((Doutside – Dinside) / 2)
But I don’t know what Doutside is…
Can this problem be solved..?