The goal of this tutorial is to illustrate modeling of dynamic loading originating from lowering a mass via a pulley assembly.

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Purpose

The primary goal of this tutorial is to illustrate how to model dynamic loading originating from a pulley assembly depicted in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Geometry of the pulley assembly

Initially, the entire the pulley assembly is at rest and the mass at joint 4 is being supported by a cable going through two pulleys and attached to the winch located at joint 1.

Winching (lowering) of the mass using a constant speed (1ft/sec) of the winch and the associated dynamic effects will be modeled. The dynamic effects will take place primarily at the beginning and the end of the winching operation when the speed of the winch changes from 0ft/sec to 1ft/sec and vice versa.

Model Description

The modeling is based on the following assumptions:

Discussion of Results

The analysis results are presented in Figures 2 to 5.

Figures 2 to 4 show the displacement, velocity and acceleration of the the mass being lowered vs. time and they clearly indicate that the model is able to correctly capture lowering of the mass using a constant speed of 1ft/sec. Except for the regions at the beginning and the end of the lowering operation which are affected by dynamic effects, the displacement decreases linearly, the speed is constant and the acceleration is zero.

Figure 5 shows the forces in the vertical cable and the feeder cable that is connected to the winch. These cable forces are consistent with the mass displacement, velocity and acceleration plots. Note that the tension in the cable decreases somewhat during winching due to damping forces that are resisting part of the load. These forces will act on the supporting structure, which is a primary goal of the analysis.

Results will be sensitive to the damping assumed and to the shape of the transitions at the start and end of winching, so sensitivity studies may be warranted.

Figure 2: Mass displacement

Figure 3: Mass velocity

Figure 4: Mass acceleration

Figure 5 Cable forces

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