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#1
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Thinking about a hinge like this (end view): ____(O)____ where "___"
is the plate, "( )" is the barrel, and "O" is the hinge pin. It would be bolted through the plates to the surface below. The barrel sits "on top" of the plates. Hope that makes sense. It's in tension and/or compression (some torsion also), so obviously the hinge pin needs to have a lot of shear strength. Clevis pins are designed for this application, so it's a matter of doing the sums and selecting a properly-sized one from the catalog. But the *barrels* of the hinge are a weak point. A plain rolled piano-type hinge would obviously just pull apart if the barrels aren't connected back to the plate. What's the best way to prevent this? Weld the barrels back to the plate so they are closed and can't pull open? Makes sense - but how sure can you be of the tensile strength of that weld? Build a test article and test it to destruction? Or perhaps you could make the hinge by folding a strap around the clevis pin, and back over itself. Then you have a double-thick plate - extra weight. And tension would tend to pull the barrel out of round and make the clevis want to center between the straps: =====O==== rather than "on top": ____(O)____. Also, you'd have a sharp reflex bend - potential crack site - where the barrel comes down around the pin and then flattens out as the top layer of the two-layer plate: __( Ideas? I know somebody has to have already solved this. btw - assume that the issues of properly bolting the hinge to the material below, and properly heat -treating the assembly, have been solved. We're just looking at the mechanics of the hinge barrel, unless I'm missing something. (Rich, yes, you know why I'm asking... ;-) ) Corrie "alllllways thinkin'..." B. |
#2
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Most suppliers have the extruded piano hings that will not pull apart before
failure. I know Aircraft Spruce has them in 6 Ft lengths aluminum or stainless steel. "Corrie" wrote in message om... Thinking about a hinge like this (end view): ____(O)____ where "___" is the plate, "( )" is the barrel, and "O" is the hinge pin. It would be bolted through the plates to the surface below. The barrel sits "on top" of the plates. Hope that makes sense. It's in tension and/or compression (some torsion also), so obviously the hinge pin needs to have a lot of shear strength. Clevis pins are designed for this application, so it's a matter of doing the sums and selecting a properly-sized one from the catalog. But the *barrels* of the hinge are a weak point. A plain rolled piano-type hinge would obviously just pull apart if the barrels aren't connected back to the plate. What's the best way to prevent this? Weld the barrels back to the plate so they are closed and can't pull open? Makes sense - but how sure can you be of the tensile strength of that weld? Build a test article and test it to destruction? Or perhaps you could make the hinge by folding a strap around the clevis pin, and back over itself. Then you have a double-thick plate - extra weight. And tension would tend to pull the barrel out of round and make the clevis want to center between the straps: =====O==== rather than "on top": ____(O)____. Also, you'd have a sharp reflex bend - potential crack site - where the barrel comes down around the pin and then flattens out as the top layer of the two-layer plate: __( Ideas? I know somebody has to have already solved this. btw - assume that the issues of properly bolting the hinge to the material below, and properly heat -treating the assembly, have been solved. We're just looking at the mechanics of the hinge barrel, unless I'm missing something. (Rich, yes, you know why I'm asking... ;-) ) Corrie "alllllways thinkin'..." B. |
#3
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The Sisu 1A Maximum Airframe Load Factors: + 6 G, - 4.6 G
The Gross weight: 730 lb And the wings are probably a lot higher aspect ratio than the ones your considering. Long skiny/thin wings need stronger spars than short fat 'uns. Just a WAG your probably looking at around 30,000 ft/lbs at the spar root for a cantilevered wing? For a 6 inch deep spar that's around 33 of those little hinge points - IIRC the numbers from the earlier thread correctly. Of course getting 33 of them coplanar so they fold might take a bit of length...... Then again with the ever reducing cost of CNC machine work you just might consider one-of-a-kind units in a larger size. I also remember seeing a post here a year or 2 ago about some extruded graphite/carbon fiber hinges. I have no idea if they are even as strong as aluminum (kind of doubt it) ones but it might be worth a quick internet search. |
#4
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A 1500-lb aircraft pulling six g's puts a 9,000 lb
load on the spar whether the wingspan is 25 feet or 50 ft. Unless I've forgotten something fundamental, you'd have 2250 lbs of tension Either I'm mis-reading or you have forgotten something fundanental. The length of the wing does have a very real effect on the spar attachment points. A quick example. Pick up an 8 lb sledge hammer by the head at arms length. 8 lbs in your hand. An easy thing to do. Grab the handle half way and hold the head out away from you again. Bit of a strain on the forarm muscles isn't it. If you go to the gym on a regular basis try again at 3/4 of the handle. Another visual aid is a gymnast on the rings trying to do an "iron cross". Almost anybody can hold themselves up on the rings with your arms locked at your side but as your "wing span" increases so does the strain on the upper body muscles. The same thing happens to spar attach fittings. My little 600 lb 16 ft span canard has over 100,000 lbs on its little spar caps at the fuselage at 6 G's. 3 is about all it will ever see unless I bounce it real bad. I hadn't considered laid-up carbon fittings. Forget hand laid carbon. The end result is generaly no better than E glass. Graphite takes considerable process control to take advantage of it's full potential. |
#5
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