TECNOMODEL
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also because that "technical values" is all to prove.
be careful not to make confusion. . .No, no, no, no, and no. polemic or not polemic, antipatic or non-pathetic... It's still not.
If you have a set of forces acting on a flexible system, you can't replace it with the resulting and think that the system behaves the same way.
These are so trivial things that if I try to explain it, it seems as if I took you for the melts.
I don't want to take you for the melts, but I don't even want them to pass as acceptable things that aren't.
I try: replacing a set of forces (two forces, but also a continuous distribution, as in the case in question) can be replaced by the resulting only if it acts on a rigid body!
You're an engineer, you did physics 1, this concept should be clear to you. If I invite you to go see him again, I'll call back to the direction, and then you know what? but yes, come on, we also apply the rigid body rules to flexible systems and we cheerfully cut off everything they teach in engineering.
Well, we put the band at 1/3 of the height. You're right.
good reasoning, moreover also a broken clock marks the right time twice a day.. .but is it not that the approach used until now is not the right one?
all this celolunghismo to partial derivatives is the least engineering approach that can exist. the engineer is the one who applies the engineer by solving a problem with the least commitment of resources possible.
set a partial derivative system costs salary hours. set a fem costs hours of salary and amortization of expensive programs and computers. at the end here is a plate (a side of the reservoir) bound on three sides that should not spread:
- the pressure distribution is known, the resulting therefore also
- considering what costs the iron, I make a supported-supported beam that resists a concentrated load in halfway equal to the resulting
- I find the profile on the market immediately higher
- I'm a caxxo containment cage with that profile.
Did I spend a little? Yes
Did I do it soon? Yes
Does it work? Yes
Rough and fast. Isn't that the engineer's work? or avoid getting into details when these are not necessary?
(*)
"Caxxo" in engineering terms of course. You know what I mean...
what you write is wrong, both in substance and in attitude.good reasoning, moreover also a broken clock marks the right time twice a day.. .
mecca but it is obvious the thing, the peak of hydrostatic pressure is on the bottom.. .I attach you a very explanatory picture of what I technically explained above.
this is a large tank with metal walls and reinforcements arranged symmetrically at constant pace (made by this company of Neighbourhoods). was filled with a liquid with constant density and in particular water.View attachment 53748the legend indicates that the effort of von mises and therefore the internal pressure generated by the fluid assumes values The Mass near the red areas and values minim in blue areas.
If you do not have discromy problems, you can see that the first third from the bottom of the wall is subject to maximum pressure due to the reaction on the horizontal bottom and reaction on the walls.
the pressure peak is on the bottom, but the maximum sigma in the material is more up.mecca but it is obvious the thing, the peak of hydrostatic pressure is on the bottom.. .
But to make fleas to the project if you look at the circles are arranged equispaced, wanting to use an analytical approach you should have concentrated in the area of the bottom and away more spaced to climb.
very interesting.I looked for the approach to the little movements you mentioned, but I found nothing about it. I found more documents dealing with the problem precisely with the approach of differential equation for elastic deformations cited in #10 and #23.
the most interesting are two papers, one of three researchers of the university of kraljevo (serbia) and the other of two researchers of the university of iași (romania). both treat the matter very similarly, then comparing the results with the fem simulation. not to say that they obviously treat only the case of the cylindrical tank.
here are the links:
https://www.researchgate.net/public...ndrical_tank_with_walls_of_variable_thickness
https://www.researchgate.net/public...lindrical_shells_with_variable_wall_thicknessnote: unfortunately the imagination makes reading some equations a real nightmare, but with some interpretation you can come to the end.
That's what I wanted to try to make you understand. . .the pressure peak is on the bottom, but the maximum sigma in the material is more up.
using the pattern of thin plates inflecting and binding it on three sides does not come out a trivial thing to solve.
1. I'm solving the problem. optimize a tank.[cut] Maybe you showed a slightly "simplifying" attitude.
which from an economic point of view could bring problems. ..we want to make 1000 tanks a year, do you think that a fem optimization is not justified if it allows us to save material on each tank realized?
maybe those 1000-2000 euro needed for optimization analysis pay off after a few hundred tanks produced.
I don't think so, since it required a practical answer as a solution to a problem and the discussion, as often happens, has slipped into the philosophical.but at op (I saw that I learned?) still interested in the discussion?
dai...non tutti. . .I don't think so, since it required a practical answer as a solution to a problem and the discussion, as often happens, has slipped into the philosophical.
dai...non tutti. . .