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There
are a number of terms which should be understood
before entering into a discussion of vibration
and shock theory. Some of these are quite basic
and may be familiar to the users of this catalog.
However, a common understanding should exist for
maximum effectiveness.
Acceleration
- rate of change of velocity with time. Usually
along a specified axis, usually expressed in "g"
or gravitational units. It may refer to angular
motion.
Amplitude
- the maximum displacement from its zero value
position.
Compression
- when specified as a direction for loading -
a deformation caused by squeezing the layers of
an object in a direction perpendicular to the
layers.
Damping
(c) - the mechanism in an isolation system
which dissipates a significant amount of energy.
This mechanism is important in controlling resonance
in vibratory systems.
Disturbing
frequency (fd) - the number of oscillations
per unit time of an external force or displacement
applied to a vibrating system. fd = disturbing
frequency.
Durometer
(hardness) - an arbitrary numerical value
which measures the resistance to the penetration
of the durometer meter indenter point; value may
be taken immediately or after a very short specified
time.
Fragility
- is the highest vibration or shock level
that can be withstood without equipment failure.
"G"
level - an expression of the vibration shock
acceleration level being imposed on a piece of
equipment as a dimensionless factor times the
acceleration due to gravity.
Isolation
- the protection of equipment from vibration and/or
shock. The degree (or percentage) of isolation
necessary is a function of the fragility of the
equipment.
Load deflection
curve - the measured and recorded displacement
of a mounting plotted versus an applied load.
Natural
frequency (fn) - the number of cycles (expressed
as Hertz or cycles per second) at which a structure
will oscillate if disturbed by some force and
allowed to come to rest without any further outside
influence.
Random
vibration - non-sinusoidal vibration characterized
by the excitation of a broad band of frequencies
at random levels simultaneously.
Resonance
- A vibratory system is said to be operating at
resonance when the frequency of the disturbance
(vibration or shock) coincides with the system's
natural frequency.
Set -
is the amount of deformation never recovered after
removal of a load. It may be in shear or compression.
Shear
- when specified as a direction for loading -
a deformation caused by sliding layers of an object
past each other in a direction parallel to the
layers.
Shock Pulse
- a shock pulse is a transmission of kinetic energy
to a system, which takes place in a relatively
short length of time compared to the natural period
of this system. It is followed by a natural decay
of the oscillatory motion. Shock pulses are usually
displayed as plots of acceleration vs. period
of time.
Spring
rate - is the force required to induce a unit
deflection of spring. A steel spring has a very
linear relationship between force and deflection.
Elastomeric springs may or may not be linear depending
on the amount of deflection due to the load.
Static
deflection (ds) - the deflection of the isolator
under the static or deadweight load of the mounted
equipment.
Transmissibility
(T) - is a dimensionless unit expressing the
ratio of the response vibration output to the
input condition. It may be measured as motion,
force, velocity or acceleration.
Introduction
You should
not shock mount disk drives!
This tutorial explains why.
One of the great
marketing gimmicks on the part of all the industrial
computer manufacturers is shock mounting disk
drives. This is a waste of money and actually
exposes the drives to higher peak loads than if
the drives were simply screwed directly to the
chassis. Drive manufacturers have made great strides
in bullet proofing their devices and the g-limits
are usually very high, on the order of 100G's.
The purchase price for shock mounts is very low
so an attitude of ``why not" is easy to understand.
After all, when your competitor advertises ``Shock
Mounted Drive Cage", you had better add it to
your specs to stay competitive. However, the true
cost to the user in added labor to install a drive
(4 mounts, 4 washers, 4 inserts, 4 special screws)
or replace a missing grommet or insert is much
higher than the simple cost of the components.
In addition, the resonate frequency of a shock
mounted drive is right in the middle of most chassis
manufacturer's vibration specifications (67Hz
natural frequency versus a chassis spec of 5-100Hz).
Ask your chassis vendor for their testing data
or engineering analysis for their shock mounts.
I doubt they will be able to provide it to you.
So why do all
industrial chassis provide shock mounts.
Every industrial chassis is very much the same.
Same layout. Same power supplies. Same look. This
is like the lemonade stand. Everybody sells lemonade.
How can your lemonade be different than your neighbor's?
So they all compete on price alone. Until somebody
adds a cherry. Now his lemonade is different.
He gets to charge more. Same with chassis. Everybody
is looking for the cherry to add. Soon, they all
have cherries. Same chassis. Same specifications.
Same shock mounts.
Shock is defined
as a single-pulse event such as dropping a package
onto a concrete floor. Vibration is defined as
a continuous sine-wave motion subjecting the product
to continuously varying g-loads along one or more
axis.
Shock affects
components differently than vibration and must
be looked at separately. A screw will not come
loose because a chassis is dropped once. However,
plug-in I/O cards or connectors may be knocked
loose from the high impulse g's from the shock.
Low level vibration may not unseat the plug-in
boards, but a capacitor may be resonate and break
the leads as it vibrates back and forth. Shock
mounts work by isolating the chassis or the mounted
component from the motion of the surrounding structure.
The best mount would be made from a very soft
material, allowing inertia to hold the device
in place while the surrounding structure moves.
If you have a CD player in your car, notice how
much the inner workings move in relation to the
outer housing. Any bumps cause CD's to skip so
they try to allow the car to bounce around while
holding the CD mechanism steady. But there must
be room for the relative motion between the case
and the inner parts. If you hit a big bump
and bottom out the inner mechanism, you will get
skips in your music.
Industrial shock
mounts work the same. They provide a soft interface
between the drive and the chassis. Or between
the chassis and the rack. Or between the rack
and the vehicle. But the only way these work is
to allow room for the surrounding structure to
move relative to the protected device. This leads
to a fine balance of limited protection versus
limited relative motion.
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