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#71
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On Aug 25, 8:35 pm, Fred the Red Shirt
wrote: As to the statement that I clearly don't understand the factors involved, you clearly do not understand what I said, the nature of preloaded bolts, or even the S-n curves themselves. Improved fatigue life due to preloading has nothing to do with friction. Friction may improve fatigue life in the real world by spreading load over a larger area, but the benefit of preloading on fatigue life is due primarily to an effect that exists even if no friction is present at all. Could you please elaborate on the theory of that effect? E.g. is this a result of the superposition of stresses? ....and... If we now begin to subject both bolts to the same cyclic loading of 1500 lbs, where the applied load is increased from 0 up to 1500 and then reduced to zero again, the bolt with the 2000 lb preload will see a cyclic load of only about 150 lbs, whereas the un-preloaded bolt will see a cyclic load of 1500 lbs, and will obviously fail much sooner. Here you temporarily lost me because you have not told us HOW the bolt is loaded. If the load consists of additional tension, then plainly the bolt will see cyclical stress over the range of 3500 lb to 2000. That is clearly the type of loading Matt was discussing. If I make the unremarkable assumption that y ou are familiar with addition then clearly you are NOT assuming that the load is applied in the form of additional tension. When a joint is pre-loaded, two important things happen. The bolt stretches. AND The plates or whatever are being fastened are compressed. When you add load that induces additional axial tensile stress in the bolt, you have to consider that the compression in the plates is being relaxed at the same time. So the stress increase is not a 1:1 correlation to the additional applied load. The slope will actually be something less than 1:1 until the point where all the compression has been removed, after which it will be 1:1. As you can imagine, the actual slope to the left of the knee is a function of the modulus of elasticity of the bolts, the MoE of the plates, and the effective area being compressed (where thickness comes into play). However, the clamping force will still cause the shear to be distributed over the surface area being clamped and not just through the bolts. The superposition of stresses is not the total story. That is a completely separate effect and loading situation than what Bud is talking about. My understanding has always been that what Bud is talking about is only effective for additional tensile loading of the fastener. But I agree with you, the clamping can be very important for shear of the bolt, even if we ignore that effect in practice. As for S-n curves, there are more than one type. The one relating to what I am talking about are the ones that show S vs N for different stress ratios. The stress ratio is the fraction equivalent of the maximum to minimum load. For example, something that is loaded in tension to 25000 psi, followed by being loaded in compression to 25000 psi back and forth, will have a ratio of -1.0 ( +25000 tension/ -25000 compression). Something loaded to 25000 psi tension that is reduced to 10000 psi tension and back and forth will have a stress ratio of .4 (10000 tension/ 25000 tension). The S-n curves show that the amount of cyclic load that structure loaded with a ratio of -1 will fail far sooner than one with a ratio of .4, even though the maximum stress level is the same. You can look in Mil-Hnbk-5 or elsewhere for S-n curves to verify that. The peak-to-peak stress difference in the first case, (ratio -1) is 5,000psi, for the second case (.4) it is 1500 psi. So it is no surprise that the first case fails earlier! Now suppose two cases in which the magnitudes of the stress cycles are equal: Yes, that is exactly what I'm talking about. In the first case the bolt is pre-loaded to 2500 psi then subjected to an alternating load of an additional +/- 1500 psi, (e.g. from 4000 to 1000 both in tension) while a second, otherwise identical but not prestressed bolt is cycled from 1500 psi in tension to 1500 psi in compression. Both bolts see the same peak-to-peak stress difference. The ration in the first case (preloaded bolt) is 4, in the second case it is -1. Which bolt fails first? Actually case 1 R=0.25, but otherwise your example illustrates my point pretty well. Cheers, Matt |
#72
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote in
oups.com: On Aug 26, 2:09 am, wrote: On Aug 25, 7:59 pm, Fortunat1 wrote: Fred the Red Shirt wrote roups.com: On Aug 17, 2:50 am, Charles Vincent wrote: Fortunat1 wrote: "Rich S." wrote in : "Fortunat1" wrote in message ... Well, obviously I'd protect it, but I'm not going to rely on epoxy to bear a load. If I can't get the holes 100% I'll bush them.... ...So I guess I'l just be as careful as I can cutting the holes. Just looking through Bengelis' book, I see he recommends using a twist drill to cut the holes, presumably to their final size,... I would test that theory first. Reamers may or may not give a good finish on wood. That was one of the reasons I quoted the study I did. The twist drill gave the best hole finish. Bits made for wood, high quality brad-point or forstner bits, may give you a cleaner hole than a twist drill made for metal. Cheap bits are crap-they'll burn their way through the wood. Actauly, having tried each on some scrap pieces of spruce, the twist drill gave the best finished hole and the roundest hole by a long shot. The 5/16th bolt was a perfect fit after having used a an 8mm twist drill. As a rule of thumb, when working wood, use tools made for woodworking. Duh! Yes, mostly I do, but in this case, I'll use what works best! I found the woood bit went a bit eccentric as it went through giving a slightly tapered bore as it went through. Wood expands and contracts with changes in humidity and it does so anisotropically. E.g. a flat-sawn board will have the highest expansion rate accross it's width, less through its thickness, and minimal along it's length. Quarter sawn or vertically grained wood, which is what you usually want for a spar cap, will have those first two rates reversed. What this means is that if you drill a perfectly circular hole in a piece of wood, as soon as the humidity changes it becomes an oval hole. The same is true of a wooden dowel. Wood finishes slow the rate at which wood absorbs or releases moisture to the air so as to prevent moisture gradients through the interior of the wood, which minimizes e warpage. But all wood finishes are permeable to some degree to water vapor. So don't get too crazy about making the hole perfect. I think the epoxy approach is a good idea. 'Kay,. but did the bipes of the thirties have the holes filled in any way? Lots of them are still flying wth their original spars. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It's interesting to hear of your results on hole quality. I have also found that a good, sharp HS twist drill works great in metal or wood. I think the place where the special wood bits like the Forstner ( a fancy hole saw) are used is in drilling large holes. For 1/2" dia holes or so and smaller, the twist drill is the way to go. If you need a 2" or 3" hole or so, well a twist drill that size is a huge chunk of metal, hard to find locally and expensive to boot. Hole saws do OK in wood ( and even metal if you are carefull) up to 6" dia or so and are what I use for large holes. I'm still surprised that a good quality brad-point would not make a neater hole than an ordinary twist dirill. At the very least it will make a neater hole at the entrance and exit. It didn't and the brad point is a very good quality bit. One of the books I have somewhere recommends a twist bit for the wood. Might be the Bengelis book but IIRC it says to use as sharp a bit as possible and to feed it at a reate that makes smal shavings, which is what I id and it worked a treat. I did some practice pieces using some scrap steel parts. I located the first hole as accurately as I could, then drilled the rest using the steel part as a guide. I started each cut by hand just turning the chuck until it was in a bit and then turned the power on. The resulting hole was about as good as it gets with zero tearaway. The bolt fit perfectly with the fit just enough friction to hold the bolt in by itself. |
#73
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Have you taken the Snipping 101 class yet?
Jim -- "If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right." --Henry Ford "Fortunat1" wrote in message .. . It didn't and the brad point is a very good quality bit. One of the books I have somewhere recommends a twist bit for the wood. |
#74
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On Aug 26, 1:35 am, Fred the Red Shirt
wrote: ... Using bushings in a hole drilled in wood helps to reduce that elongation by spreading that bearing stress over a larger area in the wood, and is a lighter approach than simply using a larger bolt. But it is still not a substitute for maintaining the proper tension in the bolts. I hasten to correct this. It is right if the bushing is merely pressed into the hole. If the bushing is well-bonded to the wood then it will distribute the stress better. -- FF |
#75
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On Aug 26, 11:22 am, Fortunat1 wrote:
... I did some practice pieces using some scrap steel parts. I located the first hole as accurately as I could, then drilled the rest using the steel part as a guide. I started each cut by hand just turning the chuck until it was in a bit and then turned the power on. The resulting hole was about as good as it gets with zero tearaway. The bolt fit perfectly with the fit just enough friction to hold the bolt in by itself. It sounds like your workmanship illustrates the difference between a builder and a craftsman. -- FF |
#76
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"RST Engineering" wrote in news:13d39pmtl6ru7c7
@news.supernews.com: Have you taken the Snipping 101 class yet? Jim No, and I have no intention of doing so so you can stop wasting bandwidth netkkkopping |
#77
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Fred the Red Shirt wrote in
ups.com: On Aug 26, 11:22 am, Fortunat1 wrote: ... I did some practice pieces using some scrap steel parts. I located the first hole as accurately as I could, then drilled the rest using the steel part as a guide. I started each cut by hand just turning the chuck until it was in a bit and then turned the power on. The resulting hole was about as good as it gets with zero tearaway. The bolt fit perfectly with the fit just enough friction to hold the bolt in by itself. It sounds like your workmanship illustrates the difference between a builder and a craftsman. Thanks, but I'm afraid my results aren't reflecting that! I suppose my interest in making the airplane as straight and safe as possible is more related to my uncertainty about what's safe to let slide than any desire to make a Grand Champion. I simply don't know enough about the things to say "yeah, that's good enough" Having said that, I do enjoy the thrill of holding a nicely made piece in my hands. Hopefully more of them will be like that than not when I'm done! |
#78
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Fortunat1 wrote:
"RST Engineering" wrote in news:13d39pmtl6ru7c7 @news.supernews.com: Have you taken the Snipping 101 class yet? Jim No, and I have no intention of doing so so you can stop wasting bandwidth netkkkopping Ah, failed the class... Matt |
#79
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Matt Whiting wrote in
: Fortunat1 wrote: "RST Engineering" wrote in news:13d39pmtl6ru7c7 @news.supernews.com: Have you taken the Snipping 101 class yet? Jim No, and I have no intention of doing so so you can stop wasting bandwidth netkkkopping Ah, failed the class... Matt Nice try.. |
#80
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On Aug 26, 1:42 pm, Fred the Red Shirt
wrote: On Aug 26, 1:35 am, Fred the Red Shirt wrote: ... Using bushings in a hole drilled in wood helps to reduce that elongation by spreading that bearing stress over a larger area in the wood, and is a lighter approach than simply using a larger bolt. But it is still not a substitute for maintaining the proper tension in the bolts. I hasten to correct this. It is right if the bushing is merely pressed into the hole. If the bushing is well-bonded to the wood then it will distribute the stress better. -- FF Excellent question! The plane I built called for 2024-T4 aluminum bushings to be epoxied in the cap. As I pointed out, using this approach not only has a larger bearing area against the wood, which is the weakest material in the load path, but it actually restores much if not all of the strength that was lost when the hole was drilled in the spar cap. If you have gone to the trouble of using bushings, epoxying them in place is fairly simple and cheap as hell. Adds very little work. Regards, Bud |
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Reaming needed on aft wing attach point. | Boelkowj | Home Built | 0 | November 7th 03 01:30 AM |