ENGINEER SOLVES MYSTERIOUS FAILURE OF MOUNTAIN
BIKE COMPONENT DESIGN USING ALGOR FEA
The Rond mountain bike in action.
June 16, 1998, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania - Professional
mountain bike riders must develop a strategy for how best to maneuver
through courses of steep hills, boulders and ravines and do it
faster than their competitors. While the best cyclists are skilled,
experienced and physically fit, they also depend on reliable,
lightweight equipment. Rond Products B.V. of Ingen, Holland, creates
quality mountain bike components to help the best cyclists cross
the finish line first.
Rond Products develops components made of aluminum and magnesium
alloys for top European bike manufacturers and riders, including
Koga-Myata, Focus, La Pierre, American Eagle and Vario, and the
first Dutch Olympic gold winner Bart Brentjes. Rond Products uses
physical prototyping in conjunction with industry and manufacturer
guidelines to optimize its bike component designs; however, recently
they enlisted the expertise of Gerhard Bosch, president of Bosch
Engineering.
Based in Oldenzaal, The Netherlands, Bosch Engineering specializes
in product development using Unigraphics Solutions' Solid Edge
CAD system and FEA software from Algor, Inc., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The firm was asked to model and analyze a new front fork design.
Before the computer analysis of the design, Rond Products tested
a prototype of the front fork made of a magnesium alloy. Cracking
occurred under normal loading conditions after only a few rough
rides. Because magnesium had not been used for this purpose previously,
it was unclear whether the yielding occurred due to high stresses
at normal loading or the stress corrosive properties of magnesium.
The critical loading type also was mysterious: was it braking,
horizontal/vertical loading of the wheel on the fork or internal
pressure by damping?
Converting the Existing Design to CAD and FEA
To solve the problem, Bosch modeled the front fork as a 3-D solid
model in Solid Edge and then transferred it to Algor using Houdini,
a CAD-to-FEA solid modeling tool. He optimized the model's surface
mesh to create a finer mesh around small holes located at the
brake and front wheel connections and then created a solid brick
mesh with Houdini. The final model had more than 12,000 nodes
and 20,000 elements; 75 percent of the surface mesh was eight-node
bricks.
A finer surface mesh was applied around critical
areas of the front fork to obtain more detailed, accurate analysis
results.
"I use Algor's Houdini to automatically create solid meshes so
I can focus on improving the overall design instead of spending
hours meshing a model," Bosch said. "Algor produces high quality
brick elements that I find to be more accurate than other element
types."
Next Bosch had to account for the loading applied by the brakes
and the horizontal/vertical loading of front wheel, which are
connected to the front fork in actuality, but are not part of
the component. To do this, he used beam elements to guide loading
to the front fork. Bosch also applied pressure loading using separate
load cases in the X-, Y- and Z-directions to the inside wall of
the front fork to determine internal pressure.
Technical information about mountain bikes and their loading
and analysis methods was obtained with the assistance of the research
and publications of the Arbeits Konstruktionstechnik II of the
Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg.
Solving the Mystery through FEA Analysis
Bosch conducted a series of linear static stress analyses to
determine the cause of the cracking. His first run showed areas
of high stress beyond the critical failure point at nodes where
normal loading was applied. Bosch performed four iterations of
his first design, making modifications to the shape of the design
and wall thickness.
"It was difficult to optimize the design without changing the
actual look and weight of the part," Bosch said, adding that sleek,
durable and lightweight parts are a requirement to be competitive
in the bike manufacturing industry. "It's very important that
the complete front fork weigh no more than 1.5 kg. If a customer
sees that your part outweighs another part, even by five grams,
they will likely choose the other part."
High stresses, indicated in red, on this brake attachment
result from loading applied by the brake assembly, which is not
part of the front fork design.
The analysis determined that the cracking experienced in the
initial prototype testing was due to the part design, not the
material properties of magnesium. The critical loading type was
primarily a function of braking and horizontal/vertical loading
of the front wheel. The internal pressure had little bearing when
considered in the overall design, according to Bosch.
After completing the stress analysis, Bosch performed a fatigue
analysis using unit stresses established through Algor. The analysis
determined the frequency of maximum peak stresses over a defined
period of time. According to Bosch, determining fatigue is extremely
important because of safety concerns.
The entire front fork analysis design.
Speeding to the Finish
Rond Products is just beginning the final prototype testing phase
of the new front fork design and is finalizing the permanent manufacturing
mold of the part ahead of schedule. According to Bosch, Rond Products'
confidence in the Algor analysis results is speeding up the final
design process.
"Because they (Rond Products) trust the analysis so much, they
have chosen to create the final casting without producing a temporary
mold," Bosch said. "In August, the first series of front forks
will be tested in the field."
Because Bosch could make quick changes to the design using Algor
FEA, he was able to produce a realistic, accurate representation
of the actual part roughly 10 times faster and cheaper than Rond
Products could produce a physical prototype. This shortened Rond
Products' design process and time-to-market. Further, Bosch was
able to optimize the design without increasing the product weight
or compromising strength. The end result: a safe, lightweight
and durable product that a professional cyclist can rely on from
start to finish.
The front fork prototype.
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