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#21
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Dan Horton wrote:
Hello Charles, According to Ker Wilson, prop flutter has no real impact on torsional vibration. He could be wrong, but he devoted more than a half century to the subject. Blade passing frequency, however, apparently does come into play in some systems. So does whirl, but that isn't the internet topic of the year. Ahh, thank you, appreciate the confirmation. Lucky dog, wish I had my own copy. I have to beg my local librarian to get it from the UA library. Dan A quote: "In most practical cases coupled axial/flexural modes occur independently of coupled torsional-flexural modes since there is usually no appreciable coupling whereby component harmonics of the shaft torque are able to excite symmetrical blade vibration." And to your earlier point: "In aero-engine/airscrew systems there are, in general, two series of excitations. The airscrew is one source, of aerodynamic origin, arising from the passage of the blades through a non-uniform airstream, or due to the airstream entering the airscrew disc obliquely when the aircraft is executing certain manouevres ..... The other series originates from the non uniform character of the engine torque." Hence the blade passing frequency. Still the flexural properties of the propellor are key in determining how the system will respond to the excitations since the prop will resonate. As far as modeling the propeller and determining its natural frequencies (it has multiple as well) it appears to be a right bear. The shape is complex and there are multiple modes of vibration and all of them have to be adjusted for RPM because the stiffness varies with the centrifugal force (the real kind). For an adjustable prop, the stiffness in the plane of rotation changes with angle. Charles |
#22
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No joy there, the charts I have show the EA81 at over 200 ft-lbs at 3000
rpm, climbing from there and not dropping below 200 through 6000rpm. Charles Dan Horton wrote: Gordon says: It works because the springs have a preload of a certain force and will compress only when torsional oscillations reach a certain amplitude. Gordon, this is YOUR lucky day! You've bumped into the only guy on the net who has actually measured the spring rate of clutch disks. Gosh, Subaru, Chevy truck, Ford truck, Suzuki, a few others too! Let's look at the spring data for an EA81 2WD clutch disk. No trouble, got it right here on my hard drive. Everybody draw a plot, torque up the left side, degrees rotation across the bottom. Ready? Draw a straight line from 0-0 to 40 ft-lbs at 3.5 degrees, and from there, proceed straight to 162 ft-lbs at 6 degrees. At a tad past 6 degrees, the springs bottom and the spring rate becomes near infinite. Gordon, you got that? Please show us the "preload" that "will compress only when torsional oscillations reach a certain amplitude". Dan |
#23
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It is descending into ridiculous semantics. Semantics, popular usage
notwithstanding, concerns itself with the notion that words have specific meanings. So for example, when educated professors go to the trouble of burdening something with the moniker of "fictitious centrifugal force" they do so in the hopes that people will not in fact mistake it for a real force. Reactive and fictitious centrifugal forces are just a convenience for doing the math, and fictitious or not, the phenomena is a result of inertia, not the cause of inertia. Charles Gordon Arnaut wrote: Charles, Actually there is more than one reality when it comes to centrifugal force, namely the reactive centrifugal force and the fictitious centrifugal force -- depending on what you want to use as your reference frame. But this is quickly descending into ridiculous semantics. My original point was that if you have a flywheel with enough inertia, it will be an effective restraining force to act against excitations that would otherwise produce vibration. Naturally, higher moment of inertia in a rotating object must necessitate a higher centrifugal force. Saying that one causes the other is quite meaningless, in a chicken and egg kind of way. Regards, Gordon. |
#24
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![]() "Dan Horton" wrote Gordon, this is YOUR lucky day! You've bumped into the only guy on the net who has actually measured the spring rate of clutch disks. Gosh, Subaru, Chevy truck, Ford truck, Suzuki, a few others too! Let's look at the spring data for an EA81 2WD clutch disk. No trouble, got it right here on my hard drive. Le'me see if I can predict what Gordon's reply will say. g He will say something along the lines that "spring rate" is really not what he was saying, and that you are needlessly being too picky with the definition, or wording of your reply. He was, after all, just trying to keep things from getting too technical. Stay tuned! -- Jim in NC |
#25
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![]() No joy there, the charts I have show the EA81 at over 200 ft-lbs at 3000 rpm, climbing from there and not dropping below 200 through 6000rpm. Charles, better take a look at your units. The above would be 114hp at 3000 and 228hp at 6000.....a rather unusual EA81. Dan |
#26
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"Dan Horton" wrote:
Gordon, you got that? Please show us the "preload" that "will compress only when torsional oscillations reach a certain amplitude". I wonder if this might add something to the conversation: http://www.international-auto.com/in...id=2600&cid=41 I recently bought an Alfa Romeo, and was intrigued to find one of these in front of the first drive shaft (can't figure out why they NEED two driveshafts on a short sports car, but that's a different thread). The transmission end hooks up with three bolts, the driveshaft with the other three. Oh, and the metal band isn't there once it's installed. It seems to me that a device like this would probably give the effect Gordon's looking for (since there's no "bottoming" of the spring, and it's clear that the thing is designed to work in the power range we're discussing (the Alfa Spider has around 120hp). I'm guessing that this was added to the Alfa drivetrain to cure some sort of resonance. Mark "Mr. Flexible" Hickey |
#27
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Dan,
How many springs are in the clutch disk? More than one right? I believe six usually. So multiply the spring rate that you measured by the number of springs. Also you have taken a clutch disk from a fairly small 4-cylinder engine as an example. I think the Ross gearbox uses a considerably beefier clutch. In any case, what's your point? Are you saying that the system will not change its critical frequency when the springs compress? Also, just to clear things up about the prop and excitations, I see that you didn't take issue what what I said, so I will assume that has been cleared up to everyone's satisfaction. Regards, Gordon. "Dan Horton" wrote in message oups.com... Gordon says: It works because the springs have a preload of a certain force and will compress only when torsional oscillations reach a certain amplitude. Gordon, this is YOUR lucky day! You've bumped into the only guy on the net who has actually measured the spring rate of clutch disks. Gosh, Subaru, Chevy truck, Ford truck, Suzuki, a few others too! Let's look at the spring data for an EA81 2WD clutch disk. No trouble, got it right here on my hard drive. Everybody draw a plot, torque up the left side, degrees rotation across the bottom. Ready? Draw a straight line from 0-0 to 40 ft-lbs at 3.5 degrees, and from there, proceed straight to 162 ft-lbs at 6 degrees. At a tad past 6 degrees, the springs bottom and the spring rate becomes near infinite. Gordon, you got that? Please show us the "preload" that "will compress only when torsional oscillations reach a certain amplitude". Dan |
#28
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Charles,
Thanks for that snippet from the Wilson book. Please note the part where he says how the "flexural properties of the propellor are key in determining how the SYSTEM (my emphasis) will respond to the excitations since the prop will resonate." Is this not exactly what I said about the prop beginning to resonate and then cuasing something else in the system to break? I have said all of this in my posts, with the exception of the part about prop excitations arising from aircraft manouevers, which is really part of the point about distubed flow. Thank you for confirming the correctness of my position. For the record now, I don't think there can be any serious question that the prop does not contribute a very real component to the excitations side of the equation. Regards, Gordon. "Charles Vincent" wrote in message et... Dan Horton wrote: Hello Charles, According to Ker Wilson, prop flutter has no real impact on torsional vibration. He could be wrong, but he devoted more than a half century to the subject. Blade passing frequency, however, apparently does come into play in some systems. So does whirl, but that isn't the internet topic of the year. Ahh, thank you, appreciate the confirmation. Lucky dog, wish I had my own copy. I have to beg my local librarian to get it from the UA library. Dan A quote: "In most practical cases coupled axial/flexural modes occur independently of coupled torsional-flexural modes since there is usually no appreciable coupling whereby component harmonics of the shaft torque are able to excite symmetrical blade vibration." And to your earlier point: "In aero-engine/airscrew systems there are, in general, two series of excitations. The airscrew is one source, of aerodynamic origin, arising from the passage of the blades through a non-uniform airstream, or due to the airstream entering the airscrew disc obliquely when the aircraft is executing certain manouevres ..... The other series originates from the non uniform character of the engine torque." Hence the blade passing frequency. Still the flexural properties of the propellor are key in determining how the system will respond to the excitations since the prop will resonate. As far as modeling the propeller and determining its natural frequencies (it has multiple as well) it appears to be a right bear. The shape is complex and there are multiple modes of vibration and all of them have to be adjusted for RPM because the stiffness varies with the centrifugal force (the real kind). For an adjustable prop, the stiffness in the plane of rotation changes with angle. Charles |
#29
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Dan Horton wrote:
No joy there, the charts I have show the EA81 at over 200 ft-lbs at 3000 rpm, climbing from there and not dropping below 200 through 6000rpm. Charles, better take a look at your units. The above would be 114hp at 3000 and 228hp at 6000.....a rather unusual EA81. Dan Your right, it was late. I was reading the chart I had wrong. It showed torgue at the prop flsnge ( after reduction) plotted agsainst crankshaft RPM. I don't have a chart for the naked engine. Charles |
#30
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Actually Gordon, the words you quoted were my words not Wilson's. You
will notice there are no quotaion marks around them in my original post. The text with the quotation marks is from Wilson. The excerpt was actually confirming Dan's contention that the excitation source was disturbed airflow, that it does not originate in the prop. Take the disturbed airflow away and the natural hysterisis of the prop and rest of the system will cause it to return to normal. So while excitations can enter through the prop or they can enter through the crank, these two components don't create the excitation, they react to them. There are components in a redrive system that can originate excitations though, which is why if you just want to fly it is easiest to pick a direct drive wooden prop snd go fly. Not guaranteed, but much simpler. Charles Gordon Arnaut wrote: Charles, Thanks for that snippet from the Wilson book. Please note the part where he says how the "flexural properties of the propellor are key in determining how the SYSTEM (my emphasis) will respond to the excitations since the prop will resonate." Is this not exactly what I said about the prop beginning to resonate and then cuasing something else in the system to break? I have said all of this in my posts, with the exception of the part about prop excitations arising from aircraft manouevers, which is really part of the point about distubed flow. Thank you for confirming the correctness of my position. For the record now, I don't think there can be any serious question that the prop does not contribute a very real component to the excitations side of the equation. Regards, Gordon. "Charles Vincent" wrote in message et... Dan Horton wrote: Hello Charles, According to Ker Wilson, prop flutter has no real impact on torsional vibration. He could be wrong, but he devoted more than a half century to the subject. Blade passing frequency, however, apparently does come into play in some systems. So does whirl, but that isn't the internet topic of the year. Ahh, thank you, appreciate the confirmation. Lucky dog, wish I had my own copy. I have to beg my local librarian to get it from the UA library. Dan A quote: "In most practical cases coupled axial/flexural modes occur independently of coupled torsional-flexural modes since there is usually no appreciable coupling whereby component harmonics of the shaft torque are able to excite symmetrical blade vibration." And to your earlier point: "In aero-engine/airscrew systems there are, in general, two series of excitations. The airscrew is one source, of aerodynamic origin, arising from the passage of the blades through a non-uniform airstream, or due to the airstream entering the airscrew disc obliquely when the aircraft is executing certain manouevres ..... The other series originates from the non uniform character of the engine torque." Hence the blade passing frequency. Still the flexural properties of the propellor are key in determining how the system will respond to the excitations since the prop will resonate. As far as modeling the propeller and determining its natural frequencies (it has multiple as well) it appears to be a right bear. The shape is complex and there are multiple modes of vibration and all of them have to be adjusted for RPM because the stiffness varies with the centrifugal force (the real kind). For an adjustable prop, the stiffness in the plane of rotation changes with angle. Charles |
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