Tonight's Dumb Idea...
David Lockhart
DaveL322 at comcast.net
Fri Feb 20 07:24:04 AKST 2004
One of the nice things about the Hanson RotorMount design - it was easy to adjust the amount of compression on the "snubber" and change the tune of the mount to avoid the worst of the resonances.
Dave
----- Original Message -----
From: EHaury at aol.com
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2004 11:21 PM
Subject: Re: Tonight's Dumb Idea...
Lance
The auto folks spend a lot of time trying to isolate (rather smooth) engines so that our vehicles are pleasant to operate. The fewer the cylinders, the larger the task. A few years ago I was intrigued by a mount design that consisted of an elastomeric material with enclosed chambers of different sizes that were fluid filled and connected by passages that were sized so that the fluid failed to flow (transfer) at certain frequencies. This allowed them to tune the mount for a range of conditions. Somewhat similar to shock absorber technology and possibly applicable toward providing variable dampening to the YS type mount.
I've wondered if the stretching of the elastomer at high throttle changes the characteristic of the Hyde type mount beneficially. Allowing for some frequency dampening variability over the operating range.
Certainly resonance issues with mechanical systems are often very complex. Amazing how well we've gotten our airplanes to work by trial and error.
Earl
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