rear upright cdr

14
Rear Upright CDR Mike Ornstein 11/6/2012

Upload: ophrah

Post on 07-Jan-2016

29 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Rear Upright CDR. Mike Ornstein 11/6/2012. Bearing Selection: Prime Option. SKF 61817-2RZ (85mm bore, 0.27kg (0.15kg in front) – 0.59lb) Deep groove. Bearing Selection: Alt Option. KB035XP0*RBC (3.5” bore, 0.27lb) X-type Thin Section. Solid Model. Rear: 2.06lbs Front: 2.18lbs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Rear Upright CDR

Rear Upright CDR

Mike Ornstein11/6/2012

Page 2: Rear Upright CDR

Bearing Selection: Prime Option

• SKF 61817-2RZ (85mm bore, 0.27kg (0.15kg in front) – 0.59lb)– Deep groove

Page 3: Rear Upright CDR

Bearing Selection: Alt Option

• KB035XP0*RBC (3.5” bore, 0.27lb)– X-type Thin Section

Page 4: Rear Upright CDR

Solid Model

Rear: 2.06lbs

Front: 2.18lbs

Old: 1.85lbs

Page 5: Rear Upright CDR

Engineering Drawing

• Coming Soon

Page 6: Rear Upright CDR

General Modeling Conditions

• Cases:– Turning (max lateral g -> normal/lateral patch

loads)– Braking (max braking forces)

• Model:– Element size 0.1”, bearings bonded to upright– Spherical joints at all real life places

• Deflections include Suspension Links

Page 7: Rear Upright CDR

Turning

• Forces applied at contact patch– Peak normal load from load transfer– Peak lateral load from max cornering

• 12.5ksi peak stress (at clevis fillet)• 0.02 deg toe change• 0.01 deg camber change

Page 8: Rear Upright CDR
Page 9: Rear Upright CDR
Page 10: Rear Upright CDR
Page 11: Rear Upright CDR

Braking

• Peak forces experienced during braking– Longitudinal due to contact patch friction– Caliper on Upright– Spindle reaction on Upright from Caliper

• 16.5ksi peak stress (at lower a-arm pickup)• 0.28 deg toe change– Due to soft toe link

• 0.02 deg camber change

Page 12: Rear Upright CDR
Page 13: Rear Upright CDR
Page 14: Rear Upright CDR