Design of Machine and Structural PartsA fully developed and very practical presentation of the subject of form design of machine components is provided in this book, including how to recognize what form or shapes cause what stress patterns and how to apply the information to an overall design. Techniques are presented that guide the design engineer to the correct kind of element to use without the need of calculations; how to choose shapes that produce efficient stress patterns. Also included is a brief review of strength/design procedures; the nature of efficient and inefficient stress patterns are covered, general principles of component design, optimizing strength-to-weight ratios, considerations for buckling and impact and the design of joints. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page xiv
... PRINCIPLE FOR FORM DESIGN 4-1 General Principle 4-2 Tetrahedron - Triangle Principle 4-3 Uniform Shear of Hollow Shaft Principle 4-4 Forcing - Load Principle + + w w w 36 37 44 45 45 35 47 47 47 48 48 48 48 4-5 Mating - Surface Principle ...
... PRINCIPLE FOR FORM DESIGN 4-1 General Principle 4-2 Tetrahedron - Triangle Principle 4-3 Uniform Shear of Hollow Shaft Principle 4-4 Forcing - Load Principle + + w w w 36 37 44 45 45 35 47 47 47 48 48 48 48 4-5 Mating - Surface Principle ...
Page 47
... PRINCIPLE The general principle is design to get uniform stress . Corollaries to this principle include the ( 1 ) tetrahedron - triangle principle , ( 2 ) uniform - shear or hollow - tube ( or shaft ) principle , ( 3 ) forcing - load ...
... PRINCIPLE The general principle is design to get uniform stress . Corollaries to this principle include the ( 1 ) tetrahedron - triangle principle , ( 2 ) uniform - shear or hollow - tube ( or shaft ) principle , ( 3 ) forcing - load ...
Page 48
... PRINCIPLE In many machine parts , certain portions of the body of the part exist for the purpose of forcing other portions to be loaded essentially in tension , compression , or uni- form shear . For ... Principle 4-6 Load-Lever Principle.
... PRINCIPLE In many machine parts , certain portions of the body of the part exist for the purpose of forcing other portions to be loaded essentially in tension , compression , or uni- form shear . For ... Principle 4-6 Load-Lever Principle.
Contents
INTRODUCTION TO FORM DESIGN | 1 |
EFFICIENT AND INEFFICIENT STRESS PATTERNS | 27 |
DESIGNING FOR RIGIDITY | 36 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
avoirdupois bending moment bending stress bh³ body bolt cantilever beam compression Considerations of Stress contact stress contact surface cross section cross-sectional area crowned tooth cylinders deflection diameter efficient Engineering Considerations equations example flow of force flux force flow free-body diagram geometry given Hertz Hertz contact stress hole inch inefficient stress patterns inertia joint elements joule Juvinall k₁ k₂ keyway kilogram lbf/in length load distribution material maximum stress McGraw-Hill membrane analogy meter modulus of elasticity moment of inertia neutral axis newton newton/meter² normal stress notch plate portion principle R₁ R₂ ratio relative stiffness rigid rivet round bar shape refinement shear stress shown in Figure shows spline spot contact spring constant spring model sprocket steel Stiffeners Strain strap strength Strength of Materials strength-to-weight stress concentration stress distribution tensile tensile stress tension thread torque transverse transverse-shear tube uniform shear uniform stress