It may be that I came across this issue at hour 8 of studying today, but either I am just really missing something (perhaps very simple) or there is an error in the solution.
This is from the 6 Minute Practice Problems, Depth Section, Problem # 47
There a four equally sized fasteners, at the corners of a rectangle, 10" wide x 12" tall.
What I don't have issues with understanding/agreeing to in the solution:
1) The moment at the centroid. It is a Clockwise Moment.
2) The polar moment of the bolt group
3) The secondary (moment) shear stress for each bolt
What I am having troubles with:
1) Resolving the secondary shear stress into it's component portions (x & y / horizontal and vertical) to evaluate the critical fasteners (the right two of the group).
So my geometry / trig shows that the ratio of stresses follow that of a triangle with a horizontal leg of length 5 (10/2) and a vertical leg of length 6 (12/2), with a hypotenuse of length 7.81.
So, in calculating the vertical component of the magnitude of the secondary shear stress, I multiply (6/7.81) x Secondary Shear Stress = Vertical component.
The solution manual shows that what I think is the vertical component is the horizontal.
The solution manual shows that what I think is the horizontal component is the vertical.
I can post a drawing if this helps.
What am I doing wrong?? I have drawn, re-drawn and thought about this for way too long today.
Hopefully someone can illuminate what is happening here.
Thanks!
This is from the 6 Minute Practice Problems, Depth Section, Problem # 47
There a four equally sized fasteners, at the corners of a rectangle, 10" wide x 12" tall.
What I don't have issues with understanding/agreeing to in the solution:
1) The moment at the centroid. It is a Clockwise Moment.
2) The polar moment of the bolt group
3) The secondary (moment) shear stress for each bolt
What I am having troubles with:
1) Resolving the secondary shear stress into it's component portions (x & y / horizontal and vertical) to evaluate the critical fasteners (the right two of the group).
So my geometry / trig shows that the ratio of stresses follow that of a triangle with a horizontal leg of length 5 (10/2) and a vertical leg of length 6 (12/2), with a hypotenuse of length 7.81.
So, in calculating the vertical component of the magnitude of the secondary shear stress, I multiply (6/7.81) x Secondary Shear Stress = Vertical component.
The solution manual shows that what I think is the vertical component is the horizontal.
The solution manual shows that what I think is the horizontal component is the vertical.
I can post a drawing if this helps.
What am I doing wrong?? I have drawn, re-drawn and thought about this for way too long today.
Hopefully someone can illuminate what is happening here.
Thanks!