I knew I had studied something, but I couldn't find the right memory.It would be enough to look for the pendulum of charpy that is explained in mechanical technology for over 60 years. definitely depends on whether it is an elastic or anaelastic impact.
Interesting, thank you.depends on the yield of the wall against which your pendulum hits. wall yielding--> small force, rigid wall--> large force.
read this discussion:http://www.cad3d.it/forum1/threads/23296-forza-impatto-ne-ho-sentite-tante
not so much, as he writes hunter also depends on the local rigidity of the objects that collide.It would be enough to look for the pendulum of charpy that is explained in mechanical technology for over 60 years. definitely depends on whether it is an elastic or anaelastic impact.
Unfortunately, the only way is to measure it through fem simulation (I use simulated creo and I can define a punctual measure that is returned to me in the report, but I think it is the same with other software: in the worst case you have to measure it in the graphic window), so the process is iterative (but if you can use a linear model - see the interaction between the two materials - you do it in two steps to the maximum). Underline: we are always in the hypothesis of building a model that is index of behavior not a model that reproduces in detail the physical reality.a doubt, how do you determine the shift resulting from the applied force?