Subject:
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Re: Joining Beams Axially at 90 deg
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.technic
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Date:
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Wed, 5 Dec 2001 19:11:06 GMT
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Viewed:
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1206 times
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In lugnet.technic, Steven Lane writes:
> In lugnet.technic, Bram Lambrecht writes:
> > Axial tension is the force on the beam caused by pulling on either end.
> > To solve that problem, you'd need to but the lock bushings on the axles
> > parallel to the beams. Perhaps you were trying to add torsional
> > (twisting) strength?
> > --Bram
>
> That's exactly what I did, Axial... axis, sounds the same,
> so I guessed that, was what it was.
>
> Steve
I've put together a little information on basic engineering terms:
http://www.texbrick.com/quick_pics/eng_terms.html
This is the stuff you learn in a statics course, as Bram noted.
TJ
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Joining Beams Axially at 90 deg
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| (...) Well my further education centered on computing, not the mechanical science's, and I knew what torsion and bending we're before hand. I bet a lot of technic readers didn't know what axial strenght was either. Steve (23 years ago, 5-Dec-01, to lugnet.technic)
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