Marshall Technical Reports Server

Testing for Random Limit Load Versus Static Limit Load

NASA/TM-108542, Lee, H.M., Testing for Random Limit Load Versus Static Limit Load, Structures and Dynamics Laboratory, Science and Engineering Directorate. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, September 1997, pp. 36, Format(s): PDF 319k

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This document is an effort to report the basic test findings in an ongoing quest for understanding how random load factors should be applied to structural components in order to verify the strength of space flight hardware. A Spacelab experiment known as the Atmospheric Emission Photometric Imager (AEPI) was subjected to both an expected flight random environment and the associated Miles' equation equivalent static load. During each of these tests, the fiberglass pedestal was instrumented with 16 triaxial strain gauges around its base. Component strains and invariant stresses were compared. As seen previously in other hardware tests, the stress distribution from the random environment was an order of magnitude below the comparable static stresses. With a proposed data acquisition system, a strain database will be developed that will quantify an empirical relationship between dynamic and static limit stresses. This event will allow a more accurate estimate of launch environment effects on new technology structural components
Keywords:random vibration, strain gauge, limit load
CASI Document ID Number:97N27636
Subjects:Engineering: Structural Mechanics: Stresses and Loads
ID Code:381
Deposited On:03 July 2002