CavemanJones
Mechanical
Hello guys, i have a question reguarding my resulting force on a shaft that a motor is driving.
See attachment for clarification.
My issue is calculating the total load. I would then use that determined load and use it in a beam calc between the bearings. Static - Lets say my arm for my motor is 4" and my distance from the arm to the center of gravity to my motor is 8" and my motor weighs 30 lbs. I determined static load by 30lb * 8in = 240in/lb divided by 4in to get 60lbs. Dynamic lets say my motor outputs 800 in/lb of torque. I take 800in/lb divided by 4in to get 200lb. This would be the load at the end of the torque arm. What would be the load on the shaft itself linearly? When I calculated this before i just took my max 200lb (dynamic) + 60lb (static) = 260 lb max load. This cant be 100% acurate but if i were to figure worse case this would be it right?
Thanks for your guys help
See attachment for clarification.
My issue is calculating the total load. I would then use that determined load and use it in a beam calc between the bearings. Static - Lets say my arm for my motor is 4" and my distance from the arm to the center of gravity to my motor is 8" and my motor weighs 30 lbs. I determined static load by 30lb * 8in = 240in/lb divided by 4in to get 60lbs. Dynamic lets say my motor outputs 800 in/lb of torque. I take 800in/lb divided by 4in to get 200lb. This would be the load at the end of the torque arm. What would be the load on the shaft itself linearly? When I calculated this before i just took my max 200lb (dynamic) + 60lb (static) = 260 lb max load. This cant be 100% acurate but if i were to figure worse case this would be it right?
Thanks for your guys help