Sysop: | Amessyroom |
---|---|
Location: | Fayetteville, NC |
Users: | 27 |
Nodes: | 6 (0 / 6) |
Uptime: | 46:26:13 |
Calls: | 632 |
Calls today: | 3 |
Files: | 1,187 |
D/L today: |
24 files (29,813K bytes) |
Messages: | 176,483 |
"Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...
Hello all
I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
bearing torsion.
...
------------------------------------------
I limit my designs to my amateur ability to analyze them. I use
on-line calculators so I don't forget anything, and a maximum rotating
shaft stress of half the ultimate tensile strength, which was verbal
advice. Usually they confirm my paper calculations pretty closely. https://amesweb.info/Torsion/torsion-of-shaft-calculator.aspx
Cold rolled shafting is good and not too expensive. The keyed version
is easy to attach pulleys etc to. https://www.amazon.com/Precision-Keyed-Shaft-C1018-Shafting/dp/B0DVQGYF5D
For the sawmill transmission the shaft size was determined by some
special ordered and then unwanted (design change) pillow blocks the industrial supply dealer gave me a bargain on. They were larger than
the calculation for the RPM and horsepower. Despite that deal the transmission still cost as much as the petrol engine.
"Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...
Hello all
I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
bearing torsion.
I needed "torsion" for the proposed new mechanical part of my rod-mill http://weldsmith.co.uk/greet/min/250722_sk_rodmill_mech.html
"Rod-mill mechanism - 22July2025 sketch"
I did all my study off the Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(mechanics)
and pages references / linked from there.
I found other works fairly-much only to "do a double" on what is in
the Wikipedia pages - what Wikipedia says is validated in that way in
all aspects I looked at.
I ran through the "turbo-generator shaft" example - got the same 69cm
answer for the diameter of what might be the shaft of the 1GW steam-turbo-generator of a nuclear powerstation.
Anyone interested to see my workings and advise / mentor?
All is in "flat" text.
Calculations done using the Lisp of the emacs text-processor - all
seen "in-line" in the "flat text".
Regards,
Rich S.
-----------------------------------------
I suspect the limiting condition may be a combination of drive torsion
plus cyclical stress from beam loading of the rods between the drum
rollers and the pillow blocks. Analysis of cantilevered shafts or
those in a rolling mill might apply. A simple fix is supporting
rollers under the drum rollers. They could be the bare outer races of
ball bearings, as used on the blade guides of metal-cutting
bandsaws. In bearing specs R is for rubber seals, S for metal shields
which have less friction but let fine dust in.
On a cost sensitive design without machining ability you may end up
with a shaft size for which you can find the drive connection,
bearings and drum rollers to fit. Then you need to know only the
minimum size and exceed it. With machining ability you can turn the
shaft end smaller and make custom sleeve bushings for larger bores and inch/metric conversions, and use second hand parts that are still
available because other tinkerers couldn't.
The lathe limits are the distance between centers for shorter shafts
and the spindle center bore for longer ones. My lathe will take ~35mm diameter through the spindle and ~500mm length between the spindle and tailstock. It's a good size for experimental prototypes and
demonstration models but not to build or repair production
machinery. My vertical knee mill with a 6" x 24" table is similarly
limited to smaller work. They let me demonstrate ideas I can't and
don't want to manufacture.
It might not be evident that pillow (plummer) blocks may mount the
bearing in a spherical shell that can compensate for shaft to base misalignment. They can be tightly fitted and stiff.
...
only one who could weld what he had designed and thus get what he
wanted, many nuclear bomb designers couldn't light a campfire. The
brilliant fluid dynamicist Sir Stanley Hooker fumbled a test of making something which gave him his book title, "Not Much of an Engineer".
...
only one who could weld what he had designed and thus get what he
wanted, many nuclear bomb designers couldn't light a campfire. The
brilliant fluid dynamicist Sir Stanley Hooker fumbled a test of making something which gave him his book title, "Not Much of an Engineer".
"Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1frd00zyw.fsf@void.com...
"Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:
......
... . A hostile foreign power could hardly
imagine a better way to cripple American industry. https://energytransition.org/2025/03/why-the-british-are-still-heat-pump-sceptics/
...
Co-generation of heat and electricity doesn't appear economically practical >at the single home scale, and they are needed without delay at different >times, if it seemed a possible answer I'd be exploring it.
"Jim Wilkins" wrote in message news:109k0bs$3kpqc$1@dont-email.me...
HP. They used to have a soldier-cranked one. https://www.ebay.com/itm/126861624359
"Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m17byajcgl.fsf@void.com...I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
The electricity "grid" here is very fragile. We in our village had a >three-day power cut last winter.
----------------------
I've lost power for over a week several times, after ice storms brought down >trees onto power lines. Trees next to the road are too risky for us to cut >down as they grow and lean into the opening, and quite expensive to hire out >if a crane must take branches down sequentially, often the case near houses. >Many people have portable or permanent generators and roof solar is fairly >common here. Although winters can be Norwegian our latitude is slightly >south of Marseilles. >https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-ice-storm-update-1.7499357
Wood heat, kettle hot water and a 12V fridge/freezer nearly give me energy >independence. The hot water can be poured into the washing machine to wash, >with a cold rinse. Garden sprayers modified with sink spray hoses are enough >for a hot shower. Planning ahead is the biggest disadvantage especially on >cold mornings. I schedule appointments for noonish or later.
For watching and recording TV I have an antenna and low power demand laptops >running Windows 7 Media center, with USB TV tuners. The microwave, coffee >pot and main refrigerator are on grid power though the refrigerator can >start and run from an APC1400 sine UPS during an outage or a storm when late >night lightning or grid loss is likely, and the others briefly from a >generator.
An inverter that senses load and shuts off when not needed would increase >battery life, the APC's ~50W idle power nearly equals the compact fridge's >draw. But the APC was free (to fix). Some models of UPS are intentionally >crippled against long term misuse on battery power, especially those that >lack a fan and can overheat with battery capacity larger than designed for. >A smaller one of mine shuts off after 30 minutes on battery.
I first added a sink spray hose to the shower head with a Y adapter to wash >the wife's dog during cold weather, and we liked it for ourselves enough to >remove the fixed head. Unlike commercial units it shuts off when released, >saving expensive electrically heated water. The extended hose reaches and >helps clean the sink and toilet. The house was all electric, the cost of >winter heat is why I bought the wood stove. One KWH costs $0.21, it has >peaked over $0.30. Those who signed up for various percentages of alternate >energy pay more to feel superior.
The long haired dog tolerated the bath as long as her head was outside the >curtain, she was willing to learn only what was mutually agreeable, yawning >or howling offended her dignity, and no perfumed shampoo. She learned to >"Shake!" water off on command, in the tub and not again until outdoors. It >was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to remember >right vs left. Golden retrievers can be smart and eager to be appreciated >but have their limits, for her about 30 words and phrases. I've read that >monkeys aren't much better, dogs just don't have the hands or facial >muscles.
https://www.progress.com/blogs/dog-chimp
After I moved the bird feeder away from the clothesline a nuthatch (bird) >fussed to attract my attention and then when I pointed toward it, out of >sight in the woods, understood and flew that way.
was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to
remember
right vs left.
"Gerry" wrote in message news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...I've worked under engineers with that problem!
On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
<muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:
was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >>that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to >>remember
right vs left.
I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
i told her to shake a paw, ...
------------------------------
I taught mine to shake right to right or left to left, as the person >offered. That was likely what confused her/it (spayed). The same side would >be easier.
On an introductory flight lesson the engineer instructor told me to turn >right toward a mountain he named, that was on the left.
"Gerry" wrote in message
news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...
On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
<muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:
On an introductory flight lesson the engineer instructor told me to turn >right toward a mountain he named, that was on the left.