For case C, where mass = 2kg, length of shaft = 500mm, diameter of shaft = 5mm, etc, the deflection is 1.9985 radians, the mass moves 1.9985m and the change in potential energy of the mass is 39.210J - that is, the same angular deflection, twice the PE change.WhiteBlue wrote:Apologies for making a late edit to my last post. I had it on the iPad and it was unsend. Then I just send it when I came back without checking what had been written. Sorry for that.
So lets repeat the look at the experiment. My view is it will not work as planned by Wuzak.
It will work just fine if the weight is adjusted. For half the angular elastical displacement, which is reached at double stiffness you must use twice the weight. It will travel half the height. I do not have to do the numbers because it is obvious for everybody that the work applied to the weight is the same in both cases.
And this is the proper demonstration that the energy of an elastic deformation in a torsional system is equivalent to the toque applied. The stiffness or the angular displacement is not relevant as we have seen. Only the torque defines the energy. You can use any stiffness or any angular displacement and you always keep the same torque, provided the stiffness and angular displacement are properly matched.
The same is not true for force in a linear system. It is not sufficient to define the energy of a linear elastic deformation because the linear deformation would be required as well to define the energy.
FWIW my experiment won't work without support along the length of the shaft which still allows the shaft to twist. This is because unsupported it would bend - a lot! Also, I haven't verified that the load wouldn't cause the shaft to fail in shear. The size was made to deliberately make large deflections from a small load.
Basically, in a torsion spring, which you are describing, the torsional coefficient is described as K = T/w, where w = angular deflection in radians, and torque T is in NM.
That looks frighteningly similar to a linear spring. which has the spring stiffness K = F/x, where x is the linear displacement.