Article Street

Welcome Guest

Article Street » Business » Rod Ends and clevis in Bending

Rod Ends and clevis in Bending

German Spanish French Italian Portuguese Russian Japanese Korean Traditional Chinese Simplified Chinese Dutch Greek
Indonesian Tagalog (Filipino) Malay Norwegian

by: alina00123
Total views: 88
Word Count: 582


We manufacture clevis, ball jiont, rod ends, Nb-gj.com has a large number of strong technical staff, to provide customers with quality products.

"Rod ends in bending". How many times have we heard that phrase?
Teams are told regularly that it is a design feature that must be avoided and there is an unwritten rule at all Formula Student or Formula SAE events that a car with REIB in the suspension or steering system will not advance to the Design Finals.

At the Australian event a few years ago as the Tech Advisor I was determined that the Australian teams would not employ rod ends incorrectly and advised every team on their correct use. I thought it was a design demon that had been exorcised, yet at the very next competition, they were back!

Some teams argue passionately that if the rod ends are correctly sized, then the adjustability of threaded rod ends justifies their use. They point out that at one time most junior formula race cars used rod ends in this way as a matter of course. One of the most ardent FSAE judges against REIB was the late Carroll Smith, yet ironically, here is the cover picture from his Nuts, Bolts, Fasteners and Plumbing book showing him posed beside a REIB! To be fair, the heavily loaded lower wishbone has a proper encapsulated spherical bearing. The picture was taken by David Gooley.

Trying to justify REIB by saying they were used on some old FFord or F3 racecar is a flawed argument because these cars had neither the tyre grip nor the brake performance of modern cars, and so had lighter loads to react through the suspension links.

Certainly, every year cars with REIB finish the event, and some even finish high in the points, but this is not an excuse for poor design. So lets talk about why teams like REIB and why Design Judges hate them.

Teams like threaded rod ends because of the ease of adjustability. When a car uses suspension components incorporating them, the adjustment of camber and caster becomes a simple matter of twisting the rod end(s) in and out. Unfortunately, this usually means they are being loaded incorrectly. Threaded rod ends are designed to be loaded in compression or extension. That are not designed to be used when loaded laterally as this tends to bend the threaded shank and usually applies shear loads across the thread roots. Bending loads tend to distort the eye causing the spherical element to seize. This quickly leads to failure as shown below.

The problem with wishbones using encapsulated spherical bearings is that they do not allow for easy adjustment. The usual method being the use of shims behind the chassis or upright mounted clevis, and here is another dilemma. The Design Judges hate thick stacks of shims so the range of adjustment is limited.

At the design stage, teams will not know the optimum suspension settings, and during the chassis build, construction errors may creep in, so suspension adjustability very desirable when testing and setting up the car.

My suggestion would be to make a set of adjustable wishbones using threaded rod ends. These can be used to set up the car prior to the event. Once the optimal geometry has been arrived at, then a set of fixed geometry wishbones using encapsulated spherical bearings, bushes or even flex plates, can be constructed for the event. The adjustable wishbones can be kept for use in an emergency.



Article Source: http://www.ArticleStreet.com/profile/alina00123-22457.html


About the Author

We manufacture clevis, ball jiont, rod ends, Nb-gj.com has a large number of strong technical staff, to provide customers with quality products.


Article Tags: , ,


Rating: Not yet rated

Latest articles contributed by "alina00123"

1: Recording enamel rod ends patterns using acetate peel technique

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

You do not have permission to comment. If you log in, you may be able to comment.