Design Procedure for Crankshaft





The following procedure may be adopted for designing a crankshaft. 1. First of all, find the magnitude of the various loads on the crankshaft. 2. Determine the distances between the supports and their position with respect to the loads. 3. For the sake of simplicity and also for safety, the shaft is considered to be supported at the centres of the bearings and all the forces and reactions to be acting at these points. The distances between the supports depend on the length of the bearings, which in turn depend on the diameter of the shaft because of the allowable bearing pressures. 4. The thickness of the cheeks or webs is assumed to be from 0.4 ds to 0.6 ds, where ds is the diameter of the shaft. It may also be taken as 0.22D to 0.32 D, where D is the bore of cylinder in mm. 5. Now calculate the distances between the supports. 6. Assuming the allowable bending and shear stresses, determine the main dimensions of the crankshaft. Notes: 1. The crankshaft must be designed or checked for at least two crank positions. Firstly, when the crankshaft is subjected to maximum bending moment and secondly when the crankshaft is subjected to maximum twisting moment or torque. 2. The additional moment due to weight of flywheel, belt tension and other forces must be considered. 3. It is assumed that the effect of bending moment does not exceed two bearings between which a force is considered. 
FIRST MULTICOLOUR EDITION

(S.I. UNITS)

[A Textbook for the Students of B.E. / B.Tech.,

U.P.S.C. (Engg. Services); Section ‘B’ of A.M.I.E. (I)]

A TEXTBOOK OF

Machine Design

R.S. KHURMI

J.K. GUPTA

What Are Titanium Alloys?



For purposes of this chapter titanium alloys are those alloys of about 50% or higher titanium that offer exceptional strength-to-density benefits plus corrosion properties comparable to the excellent corrosion resistance of pure titanium. The range of operation is from cryogenic temperatures to around 538–595 C (1000–1100 F). Titanium alloys based on intermetallics such as gamma titanium aluminide (TiAl intermetallic compound which has been designated ) are included in this discussion. These alloys are meant to compete with superalloys at the lower end of superalloy temperature capability, perhaps up to 700 C ( 1300 F). They may offer some mechanical advantages for now but often represent an economic debit. Limited experience is available with the titanium aluminides. Temperature Capability of Titanium Alloys Although the melting point of titanium is in excess of 1660 C (3000 F), commercial alloys operate at substantially lower temperatures. It is not possible to create titanium alloys that operate close to their melting temperatures. Attainable strengths, crystallographic phase transformations, and environmental interaction considerations cause restrictions. Thus, while titanium and its alloys have melting points higher than those of steels, their maximum upper useful temperatures for structural applications generally range from as low as 427 C (800 F) to the region of about 538–595 C (1000–1100 F) dependent on composition. As noted, titanium aluminide alloys show promise for applications at higher temperatures, perhaps up to 700 C ( 1300 F), although at one time they were expected to offer benefits to higher temperatures. Actual application temperatures will vary with individual alloy composition. Since application temperatures are much below the melting points, incipient melting is not a factor in titanium alloy application. 

SELECTION OF TITANIUM ALLOYS

FOR DESIGN

Matthew J. Donachie

Rensselaer at Hartford

Hartford, Connecticut

Mechanical Engineers’ Handbook: Materials and Mechanical Design, Volume 1, Third Edition.

Edited by Myer Kutz

by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.