MODIFICATION TO GENERAL MOTORS POWER PRESS ANALYZED
WITH ALGOR FEA SOFTWARE
 |
|
Danly engineers built a computer-generated solid model
of the press bed with added cut-outs using Solid Edge by UGS,
captured the CAD model using ALGOR抯 InCAD technology and performed
a linear static stress analysis. The calculated von Mises
stresses were within Danly抯 standards for safe operation and
fatigue. |
Americans love their cars as much for their looks as for their
performance. Automotive manufacturers create the curves and angles
of car bodies with stampings produced by power presses. These
presses form flat pieces of metal into the shapes we love to love.
Recently, General Motors (GM) contacted the Danly Engineering
Services Division of Enprotech Mechanical Services, Inc. about
a modification to a Danly U4-1000-132-84 power press located at
a GM stamping plant to accommodate a different type of die. Engineers
at Danly used ALGOR Finite Element Analysis (FEA) software to
analyze the modification to the 1,000-ton capacity machine.
A Danly U4-1000-132-84 power press was installed in
a GM stamping plant in 1955. Engineers at Danly recently
used ALGOR Finite Element Analysis (FEA) software to verify
that the addition of cut-outs to the bed of the power press
would not compromise the structural integrity of the 1,000-ton
capacity machine that is used to trim and shape automotive
body parts.
|
Today抯 manufacturing methods require more versatility in power
press production systems and, in this case, the customer wanted
to combine a trim function and a forming function in a single
die. In order to do this, scrap removal cut-outs had to be provided
in the heavy, load absorbing plates of the press bed while maintaining
Danly抯 strict deflection standards.
Gabe Buzas, a Danly engineer, built a computer-generated solid
model of the steel bed with added cut-outs using Solid Edge by
UGS. 揥e did a similar modification on a different press bed a
few years ago, so I had an idea of approximately how big the cut-outs
could be,?said Buzas. The Solid Edge model was then captured for
analysis using ALGOR抯 InCAD technology. An automatic, 20,000-element
hybrid mesh was created consisting of bricks on the surface and
tetrahedral on the inside.
揂LGOR抯 InCAD technology helped us to save a significant amount
of time in acquiring geometry for FEA,?commented Danly engineer
Dan Weber. 揥e were able to justify the cost of the InCAD software
because of the time we saved on this project alone.?/p>
Danly engineers determined that a linear static stress analysis
would be sufficient to verify the structural integrity of the
modified bed with cut-outs because dynamic effects are negligible
compared to the 1,000 tons of load exerted by the actual stamping
process, and because the stresses were expected to fall well within
the linear range of behavior for steel. Forces were applied on
either side of the top of the base to simulate the 1,000 tons
of load. Fixed boundary conditions were applied where the press
feet attach to the bed. The press feet anchor the entire machine
to the plant floor.
After the analysis completed, Danly engineers reviewed von Mises,
maximum and minimum principal stress and displacement contours.
揇anly has been in the power press business for decades and follows
both industry standards and proprietary standards for stresses
and displacements that are largely based on field experience,?explained
Weber. 揥e design to keep the stresses quite low in order to meet
deflection standards.?The analysis results for the modified machine
were within Danly抯 standards.
Today, the modified power press is successfully in use at a GM
stamping plant and Danly engineers have moved on to simulating
motion and resulting stresses with ALGOR抯 Mechanical Event Simulation
(MES) software. 揟he analysis of the modification to the power
press bed was easily solved with traditional linear static FEA,?explained
Weber. 揗any of our other projects are dynamic in nature and will
therefore require MES, which combines kinematics and FEA to provide
motion and stress results in a single process.?/p>
|