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![]() DSK wrote: gonefishiing wrote: refresh my memory: i'm looking for the section modulus for a boom section to understand allowable bending stress. sx= bd(squared) ? No, IIRC it's the integral of the solid cross section area distance from the axis. Perhaps term you are groping for is "section moment"? You can look it up on the web. That's why triangular sections have the greatest rigidty for their cross section area, and square sections are more rigid than oval or round. I think you may be confusing a truss with a section. For bending in plane, the most rigid section per unit weight is close to a T section with the top under compression and the bulb (or smaller bottom plate) at the bottom in tension. If the direction can be up and down this becomes the familiar I beam. For compression, a circle (tube) is generally best as again, it places most material away from the axis for all planes containing the axis. This important as the failure mode is almost always buckling and not material compression. For a combination of compression and bending the best solution lies between these cases so we see egg shapes and ovals but the object is always to place as much material from the axis as needed to contain the stress well below a yield stress. Hope this helps. Cheers |
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