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nastytroll wrote:axle are solid because most axle splines are rolled on not machined.
so you are saying hollow axles would be stronger then solid?
yes tim they will take more Torque before failing,
as love mud said i thought they gun drilled axles simply for weight and that kind of stuff.
and what is it with web wheelers shooting our mouths off?
do u even have a working 4wd?
also axles with no give, ha ha. u will see here how much twist is in quite a few different axles before they snap let me guess u think they heat treat axles and cv's to make it harder?
Team UNDERDOG #233
WERock Australia thanks to
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Ice wrote:lol its a basic understanding in mechanical power transmission
perhaps thats why i make the things and you guys just talk about them ?
Yes and it's a basic understanding you've got horribly wrong. Guess that's why I design machinery and you just make it.
How much money are you willing to put where your mouth is?
Enough that you will be selling your house lol, we are talking about a shaft which is subject to shock loading there are no other forces on it. you seem have lost the plot along the line somewhere, sure axels twist and then stay twisted. if it was such a good thing to run a solid drive shaft there would be millions of cars driving around with them now wouldnt there, or do you want to bet your house against the car/ truck manufacturers as well ?
armchair engineer perhaps ? hahahaha or your keeping me in a job lol
local recyling plant kept breaking solid shafts, they are replaced with hollowbar with soild ends welded in much like a tailshaft. they dont fail anymore i wonder why ??
yes tim the heat treating it to soften them so they arnt so brittle and take the shock loading better but you know this anyways and you know im still driving the same pos hzj75 ute ive had since the swb
1. Tube will be stronger than solid for the same mass around 40% stronger
2. For the same diameter and material solid and is stronger than tube
3. The amount given up in strength by tube is far less than the weight saving of tube
4. Weight makes balance harder and will have a lower critical torque vs speed
so you need the lightest drive shaft with the most strength and this is why you use tube
for example:
Comparing a tube with inner diameter of 90% that of the outer diameter. And a solid shaft of the same outer diameter.
The tube will have about 40% torque capacity of the solid tube. So fairly weak in comparison
but... with about 20% of the mass of the solid tube.
Tube is much more efficient. (40% as strong, 20% as light)
But if it is simply a case of comparing the two of same diameter solid is stronger.
I also worked out that the weight of a solid drive shaft (i estimated diameter 10cm and 1.5m long) would be 92kg!! (though to withstand the same amount of torque the diameter doesn't have to be as big)
I actually worked this out from first principles and didn't pull these numbers out of my arrse.
At first I thought it was a sea anemone, upon closer inspection I realised it was a funky ball of tits from outer space.
1. Tube will be stronger than solid for the same mass around 40% stronger
2. For the same diameter and material solid and is stronger than tube
3. The amount given up in strength by tube is far less than the weight saving of tube
4. Weight makes balance harder and will have a lower critical torque vs speed
so you need the lightest drive shaft with the most strength and this is why you use tube
Yes your four points are perfectly correct. But they're discussing a tube which is bigger than a solid bar.
When limited by diameter (i.e. tube and bar the same OD) the bar always wins.
Yes that includes shock-loading. I'm waiting to see how big ICE's pockets are before saying much more.