xpensive wrote:- Round that off to 600 sq.mm area and estimate the force to 4000 N/sin 30, that's just a 13 Mpa compression stress.
- When Aluminium has a modulus of 70 GPa, that's a compression of only 0.10 mm for a 500 mm rod, is that significant?
- A 500 mm Aluminium rod with a 600 sq.mm cross-section would weigh 800 g, how much do you save with carbon fiber?
- As for the buckling force, you need to know the Area moment of inertia, which I have no means of estimating,
but a 55*15 mm rectangular profile, 500 mm long and free at both ends, would take 39 000 N to buckle.
Conclusively: What do you really gain with the carbon fiber rod, stiffness, weight or buckling-strength?
the word back then was 4-5 kg in terms of weight savings per car...BUT I have never seen much activity in terms of confication of tubes etc to optimise weight per stiffness /buckling strength ..so I´d think this is a rather otimistic view .
In bicycle frames ,I´m not sure if cf frames are already significantly lighter than the very best fabricated ones made from Ti or steel..?
We have yet to see the first pushrod to show any sign of design to buckling strength -someone would expect more crosssection in the middle of the rod - and as we have seen they also do not work with material thickness change to account for this.....If weight is critical you would optimise something like that ,don´t you?