BlankCW
Mechanical
- Mar 2, 2023
- 6
I am struggling with finding a good way to express the stability of a unit. I can look at the torque and say that the torque to keep the unit stable is greater than the torque that wants to tip the unit. But we all know that if the CG is at the top of the unit, it is less stable than a unit with the CG toward the bottom. The height of the CG is not part of the torque calculations.
Torque Calculation See attached PDF.
Moments that keep the unit stable
∑M_st=0=W(X_tp )
∑M_st = 4,800 in-lbs.
Moments that tip the unit
∑M_tt=0=P(h)
∑M_tt = 2,600 in-lbs.
Ratio of Stable Torque to Tipping Torque
M_st/M_tt = 1.84
So, I am wondering if anyone has a good approach to looking at the torque but also consideration for the height of the CG. Maybe there is a two-step approach; first look at torque then look at something else and if both pass you are good to go.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
Torque Calculation See attached PDF.
Moments that keep the unit stable
∑M_st=0=W(X_tp )
∑M_st = 4,800 in-lbs.
Moments that tip the unit
∑M_tt=0=P(h)
∑M_tt = 2,600 in-lbs.
Ratio of Stable Torque to Tipping Torque
M_st/M_tt = 1.84
So, I am wondering if anyone has a good approach to looking at the torque but also consideration for the height of the CG. Maybe there is a two-step approach; first look at torque then look at something else and if both pass you are good to go.
Any thoughts are appreciated.