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1
- #1
FEAChamp
Mechanical
- Aug 30, 2019
- 7
Can anyone chime in with what procedures they go through for an FEA study? I'm supposed to be picking up more responsibility as the "Lead Analyst", and I feel like my view of how an FEA project should go is different than my bosses.
For example lets say we're analyzing a shelf that mounts to the frame rails of a truck with clamps, one assembly, 15 parts. It has quite a few contacts and bolted connections, so when all setup it might take 16 hours to solve.
Do the analysts work independently for the most part, and report back when they have results? Or does the whole team (project lead, FEA lead, management) review every setup before and after it is run? Like sit down and discuss if its the correct way to load, review all the contact sets in detail, review all the bolts, etc? Last week one of my coworkers got the static study ran for a shelf and the setup was reviewed by the owner who has experience in FEA. We reviewed the results on Friday, and determined that it was time to do the fatigue loading studies. They should have the same setup except for loads, so the study could just be copied out and modified. They were setup to run over the weekend. Well something went wrong and the results weren't available until Tuesday. It was then we discovered two sets of contact sets were incorrect and the whole study needs to be re-run, including the static load case. Now my coworker and I are getting flak for not reviewing the setup with the whole team, despite the fact that he reviewed that setup with the owner, and the three people needed to review setup (myself included) were out of the office Friday afternoon. If I'd had him wait until Monday, we would have gotten flak about not taking advantage of the weekend.
They keep wanting the FEA dept to get better at scheduling, and hitting deadlines, but how does that work when studies take 16 hours to solve. It always sounds like they expect us to stay overnight, or whatever to make sure it solves and/or the results are OK. They always like to say that the FEA dept has no urgency and often has a "well it didn't work today, lets try this change, cross our fingers and see if it solves overnight". But to me, that's a big part of the FEA process. It takes time. Staying late doesn't help, outside of instances where its going to finish solving soon, or finishing the setup to run overnight. If we stayed, we'd have to find busy work because technically we're not supposed to charge machine time.
I just feel like FEA is naturally a longer process, and they want to compact it as much as humanly possible. "That study only takes 4 hours to run, well then we should have results for the customer tomorrow". Sometimes thats true, we can get results pretty quick, maybe the next day. But often something happens and pushes the results back and its "just another instance of FEA not having urgency or sticking to a schedule."
So, FEA analysts of Eng-Tips, if you were handed an assembly similar to the one above, what would your general schedule and process look like? Additionally, how do you get your load cases and setups? Usually for us the project lead (young engineer) just knows they need FEA run, they hand it over to us, and then its up to FEA dept to develop all the load cases, design limits, fatigue parameters, etc.
For example lets say we're analyzing a shelf that mounts to the frame rails of a truck with clamps, one assembly, 15 parts. It has quite a few contacts and bolted connections, so when all setup it might take 16 hours to solve.
Do the analysts work independently for the most part, and report back when they have results? Or does the whole team (project lead, FEA lead, management) review every setup before and after it is run? Like sit down and discuss if its the correct way to load, review all the contact sets in detail, review all the bolts, etc? Last week one of my coworkers got the static study ran for a shelf and the setup was reviewed by the owner who has experience in FEA. We reviewed the results on Friday, and determined that it was time to do the fatigue loading studies. They should have the same setup except for loads, so the study could just be copied out and modified. They were setup to run over the weekend. Well something went wrong and the results weren't available until Tuesday. It was then we discovered two sets of contact sets were incorrect and the whole study needs to be re-run, including the static load case. Now my coworker and I are getting flak for not reviewing the setup with the whole team, despite the fact that he reviewed that setup with the owner, and the three people needed to review setup (myself included) were out of the office Friday afternoon. If I'd had him wait until Monday, we would have gotten flak about not taking advantage of the weekend.
They keep wanting the FEA dept to get better at scheduling, and hitting deadlines, but how does that work when studies take 16 hours to solve. It always sounds like they expect us to stay overnight, or whatever to make sure it solves and/or the results are OK. They always like to say that the FEA dept has no urgency and often has a "well it didn't work today, lets try this change, cross our fingers and see if it solves overnight". But to me, that's a big part of the FEA process. It takes time. Staying late doesn't help, outside of instances where its going to finish solving soon, or finishing the setup to run overnight. If we stayed, we'd have to find busy work because technically we're not supposed to charge machine time.
I just feel like FEA is naturally a longer process, and they want to compact it as much as humanly possible. "That study only takes 4 hours to run, well then we should have results for the customer tomorrow". Sometimes thats true, we can get results pretty quick, maybe the next day. But often something happens and pushes the results back and its "just another instance of FEA not having urgency or sticking to a schedule."
So, FEA analysts of Eng-Tips, if you were handed an assembly similar to the one above, what would your general schedule and process look like? Additionally, how do you get your load cases and setups? Usually for us the project lead (young engineer) just knows they need FEA run, they hand it over to us, and then its up to FEA dept to develop all the load cases, design limits, fatigue parameters, etc.