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Fastener negative tensile force

346gnu
12-Amethyst

Fastener negative tensile force

Morning.

This is a new one on me, how can a fastener tension go negative?

WF4 M150 x64

'Advanced' fasteners

Fastener32_separation_stress:160
Fastener32_shear_force:30966
Fastener32_shear_stress:188
Fastener32_tensile_force:-18662

fix separation is OFF explicitly.

There is a contact explicitly defined.

There are several fasteners that have done this.

Thoughts?

Thanks


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3 REPLIES 3
346gnu
12-Amethyst
(To:346gnu)

More info, this is a ring held onto another component by 32 screw fasteners.

Examiniation of the mesh at the interface between the 2 components reveals:

1. Every other fastener has a BIG separation test diameter, (or conversely, every other fastener has a small test diameter). This is depsite all fastener definitions are the same.

2. The mesh shows that 4 of the fasteners do not appear to have a separation test diameter created at all

I saw this behavior a few times when fasteners were grouped fairly closely together, such that their separation test diameter regions were close or overlapping. Sometimes just a small tweak in the diameter value would provide the correct behavior. Most of the time that I remember the issue, it was a group of four holes in a close square pattern, and it was not consistently correct or incorrect and I wasn't able to determine the root cause of the times it behaved badly.

Thanks Brad, yes, I know that one too. Aslo (and sometimes) when over the edge of the geometry but always when overlapping a surface/volume region.

In this case none of these. Had me scratchng my head as the model run (convergence of contacts took all weekend), deformed shape, displacements and stress patterns looked intuitive, but the forces simply did not add up.

... It turns out it's the 'split surfaces' of the contact between the components. A surface region that's hidden in the prep. The overlap was slight. I have tweaked the test diameter and the residual norms at the contact seem well behaved and monotonic this time.

It is peculiar how the s/w interpretted this overlap to give size alternating and some missing test diameters.

Presumably the force calculation is confused by the elements 'existing' in multiple regions and the s/w doesn't understand how to add 'em up.

Do you know if we switch off these test diameters somehow? 99% of the time we use contact regions and therefore the test diameters are not of any use.

For others out there, this may be helpful ...

symptoms can include lengthy meshing with complaints including overlapping geometry with the diagnostics putting up little red circles or purple crosses in the model at locationss that seem to bear absolutely no relation with the actual location of the problem. The clue here is 'overlapping geometry', the s/w is right, but you can't see it as the test diameter surface region is not created by the user. The only way to look for it is to mesh one component at a time so you can see the interface surfaces and the automatically created annular region ... and then you have to remember that it could be the split surfaces.

Subtly misaligned fasteners can give similar symptoms. The misalignment can be fractional (often as a result of 2 components having had their holes defined outwith a skeleton, or having lost their external references at some point ...) Gross misalignment means the fastener cannot be created. Mechanica 'ignores' subtle misalignment and then gives you a hard time when meshing followed by daft answers if it runs.

.

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