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Subject: 
Re: Joining Beams Axially at 90 deg
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.technic
Date: 
Wed, 5 Dec 2001 19:11:06 GMT
Viewed: 
1206 times
  
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



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: Joining Beams Axially at 90 deg
 
(...) 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)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Joining Beams Axially at 90 deg
 
(...) That's exactly what I did, Axial... axis, sounds the same, so I guessed that, was what it was. Steve (23 years ago, 5-Dec-01, to lugnet.technic)

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