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Experiments on stiffened conical shell structures using cast epoxy modelsDescription of a casting technique for fabricating high-quality plastic structural models, and review of results regarding the use of such specimens to parametrically study the effect of base ring stiffness on the critical buckling pressure of a ring-stiffened conical shell. The fabrication technique involves machining a metal mold to the desired configuration and vacuum-drawing the plastic material into the mold. A room-temperature curing translucent thermoset epoxy was the casting material selected. A shell of revolution computer program which employs a nonlinear axisymmetric prebuckling strain field to obtain a bifurcation buckling solution was used to guide the selection of congifurations tested. The shell experimentally exhibited asymmetric collapse behavior, and the ultimate load was considerably higher than the analytical bifurcation prediction. The asymmetric buckling mode shape, however, initially appeared at a pressure near the analysis bifurcation solution.
Document ID
19740031402
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Williams, J. G.
Davis, R. C.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, Va., United States)
Date Acquired
August 7, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1973
Subject Category
Machine Elements And Processes
Report/Patent Number
SESA PAPER 2268A
Meeting Information
Meeting: Fall Meeting of the Society for Experimental Stress Analysis
Location: Indianapolis, IN
Start Date: October 16, 1973
End Date: October 19, 1973
Sponsors: Society for Experimental Stress Analysis
Accession Number
74A14152
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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