1 / 30

Project Rampway

Project Rampway. ME 450–Finite Element Analysis Spring 07 Aaron Emmons, Bryce Young and Eric Bush Professor Dr. K. Nema Monday – April 30 th , 2007. Presentation Summary. Eric Objective Introduction Theoretical Concepts Model Details / Material Properties / Cost Aaron Loading Cases

ranit
Download Presentation

Project Rampway

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Project Rampway ME 450–Finite Element Analysis Spring 07 Aaron Emmons, Bryce Young and Eric Bush Professor Dr. K. Nema Monday – April 30th, 2007

  2. Presentation Summary Eric • Objective • Introduction • Theoretical Concepts • Model Details / Material Properties / Cost Aaron • Loading Cases • Results and Discussion Bryce • Finish Results and Discussion • Impact Statement • Present Conclusions

  3. Objectives • Utilize knowledge learned through Mechanical Engineering to obtain experimental results on a real-world example • Examine two different materials to optimize a motorcycle ramp for structural integrity and usability • Accomplished by structural Finite Element Analysis of both aluminum and steel ramps through Pro/E and Pro/E Mechanica

  4. Introduction Project Background / Goal • To produce the groundwork for material selection and load limits for a motorcycle loading ramp. (pickup truck) • Use Finite Element Analysis to understand performance of aluminum and steel • Compare Weight and Cost Previous Work • Finite Element Analysis of experimental objects in ME 450

  5. Theoretical Background Displacement in terms of Cartesian components: Von Mises Stress in 3 dimensions:

  6. Theoretical Background Cont. Factor of Safety: Relation between Von Mises, Yield Strength, and factor of safety:

  7. Model Details • Table 1: Ramp Dimensions

  8. Model Details II • Table 2: Material Properties

  9. Model Details III • Table 3: Steel vs. Aluminum Properties

  10. Model Details IV Mesh • Automatically generated by Pro-Mechanica at 1300 elements • Multi-pass adaptive solution

  11. Model Loading • Uniform Pressure Load, Central Localized Load and Off-centered Localized Load • Ramp is fixed for zero displacement at the base as well as the top angled flange to simulate ground and truck bed loading conditions

  12. Loading Conditions • Uniform Pressure Load – used to establish initial maximum load and force per unit area • Central Localized Load – set at approximately 60 inches (average wheel base of motorcycle) to simulate motorcycle tires • Off-Center Localized Load – real world condition of loading motorcycle up ramp under the assumption tires will not follow center of ramp

  13. Results and Discussion • Von Mises Stress and Displacement Analysis for Aluminum vs. Steel • Uniform Pressure Load • Central Localized Load • Off-center Localized Load

  14. Uniform Pressure Load Aluminum • Von Mises Stress Analysis (Load = 16000 N/m^2)

  15. Uniform Pressure Load Steel • Von Mises Stress Analysis (Load = 17500 N/m^2)

  16. Uniform Pressure Load Aluminum • Displacement (Load = 16000 N/m^2)

  17. Uniform Pressure Load Steel • Displacement (Load = 17500 N/m^2)

  18. Results of Uniform Pressure Load Aluminum Steel

  19. Central Localized Load • Von Mises Stress Analysis (Load = 4479 N) Aluminum Steel

  20. Central Localized Load • Displacement (Load = 4479 N) Aluminum Steel

  21. Results of Central Localized Load Aluminum Steel

  22. Off-Center Localized Load • Von Mises Stress Analysis (Load = 4479 N) Aluminum Steel

  23. Off-Center Localized Load • Displacement (Load = 4479 N) Aluminum Steel

  24. Off-Center Localized Load • Bending due to off-center loading

  25. Results of Off-Center Localized Load Aluminum Steel

  26. Impact Statement • This project is simulates a material selection and design validation process that a manufacturer would use in choosing a material and verifying the functional limits of a design prior to production. • An FEA analysis aids in producing a product that performs as advertised, which allows the production a safe and cost effective design that fulfills the needs of consumers. • Due to familiarity, Pro/E Mechanica was used to as the FEA software to perform the described analysis.

  27. Conclusions • The highest magnitude of stress occurred at the intersection of the angled flange • The largest displacements occurred at the center of the ramp. • Cost - Aluminum cost less than steel by more than $240 • Weight – Steel out weighs aluminum by more than 100 lbs increasing the difficulties associated with normal use and transportation

  28. Conclusions Cont. • Strength – For the same design, steel’s structural properties are superior to aluminums allowing for higher load limits and smaller displacements under the load conditions produce by a 1000lb motorcycle. • Consider weight, cost, and loaded performance, aluminum proved to be the superior material for the motorcycle ramp. • Aluminum motorcycle ramps are widely produced, indicating that manufacturers arrived at similar conclusions.

  29. References • http://www.realclassic.co.uk/ridesfiles/rides05011401.jpg • http://www.horizonsunlimited.com/newsletter/images2003/2003-04-01_Maarten-TwoWheeler.jpg • ME450 – Lecture Notes via Oncourse

  30. Questions???

More Related