ALGOR FEA PROGRAM EVALUATES AXLE SPINDLE STRESS RISER
E.J. Stefanides
Design News Central States Editor
Design News Magazine - October 1, 1990
 | Prototype
version of the new front axle system as mocked up on a Ford Bronco
by design engineers for durability testing. - Photo by Dave Brockett |
Installing vacuum-actuated locking hubs on the front axle of a
South-Korean-built 4-wheel-drive truck required modifying the
axle's spindles to allow the passage of a vacuum line to the hub's
actuator. Finite element analysis (FEA) was used to investigate
the stress-riser effect generated by the hole. The data will help
the truck builder plan the type and degree of the spindle modification
needed to ensure reliability and long-term durability.
A total of five analyses were made. The first, done on an unmodified
spindle, provided baseline data for comparison with the results
of analyses of modified parts. Four other analyses were made with
the hole at different radial locations in the spindle. Engineers
considered these variations necessary because the hub's design
allows considerable flexibility in locating the vacuum line.
Study results demonstrated that the stress rise effect varies
with hole orientation. The localized increase in stress it caused
reached 15% with the hole located on the spindle's vertical axis
(the load axis). A minimum stress riser effect developed (no increase)
with the hole on the horizontal axis, 90o from the
load axis.
 | Model
for FEA analysis with part geometry, meshing, boundary conditions,
and loadings as created by graphic routines. |
A central bore in the spindles - which are steel forgings - accommodates
the front axle. Critical components of the front suspension, these
forgings support around 25% of the vehicle's weight and transfer
tire and wheel loads to the suspension. They have thin-walled
tubular outer section cantilevered from an inner flange.
Modifying the spindles to accept a vacuum-actuated locking hub
requires making a 4-mm-diameter hole in each spindle. Though small,
this hole would be drilled through the base of the spindle's tubular
section at a point close to its integration to the flange. Its
axial location places the hole in an area of higher stress. Thus,
the truck maker needed to know how much it would increase spindle
stresses.
For the study, engineers used the Algor Finite Element Analysis
(FEA) System. Designed for desktop computers, this system is sold
outright rather than leased. It's made in versions for use on
IBM AT and AT-compatible computers, for machines that use the
80386 and 80486 chips, and for computers that use these chips
with the high-performance Weitek coprocessor.
 | Results
of FEA for a spindle with a hole on its load axis show that the
hole causes a 15% increase in stress level. |
To make the FEA studies, a design engineer used the appropriate
version of the Linear Stress analysis software package and a Compaq
computer equipped with the 386 chip. As for the model, it was
made using data taken from the truck builder's drawings and sample
parts, and applying loads derived from vehicle weight data. These
data were applied to Algor's ViziCad Plus graphical system. Stresses
were determined using the package's FEA processor for linear static
stresses. The results were displayed, manipulated and recorded
using ViziCad Plus and the SPlot graphical plotter control program.
Warn Industries, Milwaukie, Oregon, the manufacturer of the automatic
locking hubs, made the FEA study at the request of the truck manufacturer.
Clark Wilson, the Warn engineer responsible for the application,
performed the analyses.
Wilson says that durability questions such as this are normally
evaluated by a rigorous prototype testing program. "In fact,"
he says, "we had already built and installed prototypes of
this system on several test trucks, and one of these vehicles
is now undergoing these tests. But the truck builder's stress-riser
question came up before this testing had begun." Wilson used
FEA to obtain a quick and accurate answer to the question. Warn
Industries' prior experience with this method revealed close correlation
between its results and those of test programs.
 | Clark
Wilson, Engineer, Warn Industries |
In discussing the study, Wilson says: "Using the computer
and this FEA System, I was able to run five different models in
about two days. To obtain the same results by hand methods would
have taken much longer. The results have confirmed our original
intuitive judgment and have given our customer a starting point
for his own design and testing. It has also given us a better
understanding of the requirements of our own system and put us
in a better position for making recommendations to this manufacturer
and other OEMs."
Copyright © 1990 Algor, Inc. All rights reserved.
|