DaveW wrote:Apologies, but I feel I must respond to Tommy Cookers' last post.
Tommy Cookers wrote:... with shear gauge bridges and direct gauge bridges and analogue signal arithmetic ...
That sounds as if you were following the thought posted by Greg, which he referred to as "SIMO" (I actually thought he meant "MISO", but in your case it would be "MIMO"). If that is true, then I think you have moved the complication from gauging to signal conditioning, and exhaustive calibration. I guess each copy will have its own transformation array (or analogue signal arithmetic gains).
Tommy Cookers wrote:necessarily, the cross-axis sensitivities were trivial
I guess you mean gauge sensitivities, but I was concerned about structural cross coupling, which you will have calibrated out (If you've guessed lucky, according to Greg).
Tommy Cookers wrote:... which realised good stiffness only when bolted to the (non-precision) test structure
That idea bothers me. It suggests that the attachment details, and the way it is torqued up, will affect the transformation matrix...
this (30 years ago) was a 6 component 'dynamometer' balance I designed to have negligibly small cross-axis sensitivities
the 'negligibly small' criterion was probably eased by really only 4 ? components being significant to this project
some economies of activity were needed, in principle each test could have involved measurements from about 200000000000 waves
in short, Magnesium alloy allowed better sensitivity both by the mechanism previously stated and
due to its low moduli allowing a thicker section (helping 'column strength' needed for large roll and pitch moments)
4 members mechanically in parallel, each gauged with 2 bridges each representing in output its side force or vertical force
so 8 outputs then arithmetically analogue-combined at unity gain into 6 channels of data representing the 6 components of load
yes, you couldn't want to make yourself a slave to anything indicated pre-arithmetic
and I worried about IMO what you are calling structural cross-coupling, but experience always showed it was an irrelevance
the through calibration made after the trauma of integration with the test structure agreed with the earlier calibration
and supported the policy of neglecting the cross-axis terms
conveniently, later 6 component balances were smaller and so could all be 1 piece (then helped by access to the master gauge catalogue
to reduce milling I designed the gauged sections to be curved, iirc in part because anticlastic bending helped the strain field shape
one essential task for the designer is minimise cross-axis sensitivities (eg in a 6 component balance)
otherwise the necessary calibration will become impractically extensive, and balance performance in use will be degraded
and much of so-called drift or hysteresis perceived in balance output is actually an artifact of calibration methods
time-related internal thermodynamic effects are significant in larger balances, as some eg NPL and Schenk are aware
these factors should be addressed eg in (semi) automated calibration systems, but are ignored as inconvenient in some offered