koopas
Aerospace
- Aug 24, 2002
- 106
Hello all,
It's been a while since I've posted on here. Hope everybody is doing well, and happily employed.
I posted a question on webs a while ago and was essentially told to do some more reading on the subject before coming back. I started thinking about it today when I had to do a repair on a web, near the lower cap. The part was only an aluminum shield that went over the hydraulic reservoir in the wheel well, rather non-structural but it got me thinking about web repairs again.
The SRM calls out two rows around a cut out for a web repair. In fact, if you use Ftu to size the number of fasteners, you'll end up with four, maybe five rows of fasteners. However, if you use Fsu, you'll be back down to two rows. Checking replies to my older post, someone mentioned that you still need to size to Ftu since, in a diagonal tension or even pure diagonal tension web, the web takes most (if not all) the shear load in diagonal tension, respectively. Hopefully, I paraphrased the latter part correctly.
1. How do you identify if the web is a shear resistant web, that doesn't buckle under ultimated shear load, or rather a diagonal tension-type of web? In the first case, I believe that designing to Fsu is prudent, since Fsu is never exceeded by design. In the second case, the web has no compressive stiffness, and takes most of the load in tension. In such a case, it would make sense to design a web repair to Ftu.
2. I was also thinking...Do you guys/gals assume that the web portion of the beam, regardless of its location with respect to the caps (which carry axial load), takes only shear loads? Reason I am asking is that the repair today was in the web area close to the cap. I conjecture that the loading is a mix of shear and axial loads. However, most books assume that caps take purely axial load and webs all the shear load, most likely (and I am speculating) because the web is so thin that it contributes very little first moment of the area "Q" to the shear flow/stress formula VQ/I or VQ/It.
3. This is a continuation of question 2...what allowable (Fsu, Ftu, or something else?) do you use in such combined loading cases? This particular area may experience a combination of shear and axial load which, separately, may result in individually positive margins of safety against Fsu and Ftu, respectively. However, when combining these two loading types, is designing to Fsu, even Ftu, even enough to yield a positive combined-loading margin of safety?? What allowable do you design to in combined-loading cases? Do you bump up Ftu? I guess I am asking for the ultimate stress allowable in shear + bending for say, 7075-T6. Does such a beast exist? Does the question even make sense? Perhaps I am finding myself asking a question in the "design" realm to a "repair and salvage" issue. Reading Niu's red book, pp 469, you can calculate shear stress ratios fs/Fs and bending stress ratio fb/Fb and use the interaction formula Rs^2 + Rb^2 = 1 to determine the combined-loading M.S. How do you relate that to a repair scenario?
Hoping these questions make sense,
Alex
It's been a while since I've posted on here. Hope everybody is doing well, and happily employed.
I posted a question on webs a while ago and was essentially told to do some more reading on the subject before coming back. I started thinking about it today when I had to do a repair on a web, near the lower cap. The part was only an aluminum shield that went over the hydraulic reservoir in the wheel well, rather non-structural but it got me thinking about web repairs again.
The SRM calls out two rows around a cut out for a web repair. In fact, if you use Ftu to size the number of fasteners, you'll end up with four, maybe five rows of fasteners. However, if you use Fsu, you'll be back down to two rows. Checking replies to my older post, someone mentioned that you still need to size to Ftu since, in a diagonal tension or even pure diagonal tension web, the web takes most (if not all) the shear load in diagonal tension, respectively. Hopefully, I paraphrased the latter part correctly.
1. How do you identify if the web is a shear resistant web, that doesn't buckle under ultimated shear load, or rather a diagonal tension-type of web? In the first case, I believe that designing to Fsu is prudent, since Fsu is never exceeded by design. In the second case, the web has no compressive stiffness, and takes most of the load in tension. In such a case, it would make sense to design a web repair to Ftu.
2. I was also thinking...Do you guys/gals assume that the web portion of the beam, regardless of its location with respect to the caps (which carry axial load), takes only shear loads? Reason I am asking is that the repair today was in the web area close to the cap. I conjecture that the loading is a mix of shear and axial loads. However, most books assume that caps take purely axial load and webs all the shear load, most likely (and I am speculating) because the web is so thin that it contributes very little first moment of the area "Q" to the shear flow/stress formula VQ/I or VQ/It.
3. This is a continuation of question 2...what allowable (Fsu, Ftu, or something else?) do you use in such combined loading cases? This particular area may experience a combination of shear and axial load which, separately, may result in individually positive margins of safety against Fsu and Ftu, respectively. However, when combining these two loading types, is designing to Fsu, even Ftu, even enough to yield a positive combined-loading margin of safety?? What allowable do you design to in combined-loading cases? Do you bump up Ftu? I guess I am asking for the ultimate stress allowable in shear + bending for say, 7075-T6. Does such a beast exist? Does the question even make sense? Perhaps I am finding myself asking a question in the "design" realm to a "repair and salvage" issue. Reading Niu's red book, pp 469, you can calculate shear stress ratios fs/Fs and bending stress ratio fb/Fb and use the interaction formula Rs^2 + Rb^2 = 1 to determine the combined-loading M.S. How do you relate that to a repair scenario?
Hoping these questions make sense,
Alex