|
spring inertia | |||
Post Reply | Forum |
Posted by: crash! ® 03/21/2006, 13:55:47 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
I'm compressing a large automotive suspension spring, and then releasing it with a trigger mechanism. The goal is to accelerate a metal plate up to 65 ft/s for a test. How can I calculate the maximum speed I'll get if I know the spring constant, spring mass (wire dia, etc), and the mass of the metal plate? |
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | View All | | Next | |
Replies to this message |
Re: spring inertia | |||
Re: spring inertia -- crash! | Post Reply | Top of thread | Forum |
Posted by: zekeman ® 03/21/2006, 22:03:37 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
F^2/2K=mv^2/2
v=F*sqrt(m/K) where F is the max force on spring m=mass of plate K=spring constant v=max velocity First determine F and K from spring formulae. |
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | Where am I? Original Top of thread | | | |
Re: spring inertia | |||
Re: Re: spring inertia -- zekeman | Post Reply | Top of thread | Forum |
Posted by: crash! ® 03/21/2006, 22:19:04 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
Thanks! I'll work on it.
Alan |
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | Where am I? Original Top of thread |
Re: spring inertia | |||
Re: Re: spring inertia -- zekeman | Post Reply | Top of thread | Forum |
Posted by: zekeman ® 03/21/2006, 22:09:57 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
Correction
v=F*sqrt(1/mK)) |
Post Reply | Recommend | Alert Administrator | Where am I? Original Top of thread | | | |
Powered by Engineers Edge
© Copyright 2000 - 2024, by Engineers Edge, LLC All rights reserved. Disclaimer