LtBuzzkill
New member
- Sep 28, 2012
- 10
Hello.
I often have to size or analyze secondary structures to abuse loads, the requirement for which I always see written as an ultimate load (150 lb, 300 lb, etc.) applied at the most critical location. Although I've never been able to find it explicitly written in the structures manuals or in the requirements of our customers, the senior engineers in my office often require a check at limit load as well, such that the defined ultimate load is divided by 1.5 and the stress is compared to yield allowables. In cases where the critical failure mode is bending (and I find that it is quite often the case for the structures I’m checking), the limit load always determines the size of the structure because the ratio of ultimate to limit allowables is greater than 1.5 when plasticity is considered.
My thinking is that if it were intended that the structure not yield under abuse load as well as not break at ultimate load, then the abuse load would be defined as limit and it would be explicitly stated that an ultimate check at 1.5 times the limit load is required. That would leave no room for misinterpretation. As I understand it, that's the relationship between limit and ultimate flight load conditions. I think that same relation may be misapplied here.
So, in your experience, are abuse loads required to be checked at both limit and ultimate stress levels, whether or not that requirement is explicitly stated, or are our seniors oversizing structure? If anyone has insight into why abuse loads are defined as ultimate, and so often there is no yield requirement stated, it would be much appreciated. Thank you in advance for your replies.
LBK
I often have to size or analyze secondary structures to abuse loads, the requirement for which I always see written as an ultimate load (150 lb, 300 lb, etc.) applied at the most critical location. Although I've never been able to find it explicitly written in the structures manuals or in the requirements of our customers, the senior engineers in my office often require a check at limit load as well, such that the defined ultimate load is divided by 1.5 and the stress is compared to yield allowables. In cases where the critical failure mode is bending (and I find that it is quite often the case for the structures I’m checking), the limit load always determines the size of the structure because the ratio of ultimate to limit allowables is greater than 1.5 when plasticity is considered.
My thinking is that if it were intended that the structure not yield under abuse load as well as not break at ultimate load, then the abuse load would be defined as limit and it would be explicitly stated that an ultimate check at 1.5 times the limit load is required. That would leave no room for misinterpretation. As I understand it, that's the relationship between limit and ultimate flight load conditions. I think that same relation may be misapplied here.
So, in your experience, are abuse loads required to be checked at both limit and ultimate stress levels, whether or not that requirement is explicitly stated, or are our seniors oversizing structure? If anyone has insight into why abuse loads are defined as ultimate, and so often there is no yield requirement stated, it would be much appreciated. Thank you in advance for your replies.
LBK