Dear all,
I have the structural model of an aircraft, including wing and fuselage. The wing is made of skin panels, as well as spars and ribs modelled by caps (beams) and webs (panels). The fuselage is composed of skin panels, longerons and ringframes beams.
I'm doing a SOL101 on this model with one set of mechanical and thermal loads simulating the cruise condition.
In "Help System>Failure Analysis>Buckling>Beam buckling", I noticed the following tip:
'Tip: If the beam is supported along its span (i.e. ringframe), beam buckling modes should be deactivated.'
I was wondering if this is also valid for my longerons, ribs and spars caps?
When I have the beam buckling activated, I get extremely high weights due to the huge (and sometimes unrealistic) size of the beams. But when I deactivate the beam buckling for longerons and spars/ribs cap beams, the result approaches what I was expecting.
I think that this Euler beam buckling is an over-conservative approach for these elements, but I would like to be sure that I'm not missing something important by deactivating this failure mode?
Thanks
Regards