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Vibration Testing
1) INTRODUCTION: Vibration testing is the process of applying a
controlled amount of vibration to a test specimen, usually for
the purposes of establishing reliability or testing to
destruction. In practice the test article is securely mounted on
a shaker table or actuator, which may be operated by
electro-dynamic or hydraulic force; typically hydraulic force is
used at very low frequencies because of the large displacements
involved, and electro-dynamic force is used where higher
frequencies are involved.
An electro-dynamic shaker is a linear motor: a moving coil in a
fixed magnetic field that is the same principle used in the
construction of a loud-speaker. The magnetic field is generated
either by permanent magnets or a DC current in a field coil, and
audio power is provided by an amplifier of suitable rating,
typically requiring about 10 watts of audio/ pound force
generated.
Some type of signal source is necessary to drive the amplifier,
and an accelerometer is needed to measure the vibration response
of the test article. Accelerometers are referred to as
"Integrated", meaning they have a built-in amplifier and need a
current source for power, or "Charge" type, requiring an
external charge-converter to make a usable signal from their
output. If the test article is large, then the response may vary
across its surface and multiple accelerometers may be used and
the outputs averaged.
The overall response curve is usually VERY non-uniform due to
the response curves of the amplifier and shaker, and mechanical
resonances of the shaker, test article, and mounting fixtures.
To cure this, a controller us used to servo the actual measured
response to the desired response curve. Controllers may be
rack-mounted analog instruments or digital computer-based
products.
The signal source usually attempts to simulate the real-world
environment that the test article will operate in. Two
methodologies are commonly used: Swept-sine and Random testing.
In the Swept-sine approach the frequency is swept back and forth
with amplitudes corresponding to the desired test levels. In
Random testing the frequency spectrum of a noise source is
shaped to represent the environment that the article will
operate in. An additional test approach is Classical shock
testing where the article is subjected to one or more high level
shock pulses; this is similar to a one time drop-test that might
occur in shipping. In all three approaches the test level can be
increased until destruction occurs, thus establishing the safety
margins.
2) SHAKERS: Vibration may be accomplished with hydraulic
actuators or high-level acoustics for specialized testing, but
only electro-dynamic type will be discussed here. All are
variations on the common audio speaker design, i.e., they are a
coil moving linearly in a magnetic field; instead of a speaker
cone attached to the coil, a mounting plate is attached to which
test articles are mounted. There are very tiny ones for
accelerometer testing, but the most popular size is around 100
force-pounds. A shaker is rated at the maximum force it can
apply to the total moving mass, which is the sum of the shaker
moving parts, the fixture and the test specimen; a shaker could
apply a 100# force at 100 G’s to a 1# total mass or 10 G’s to a
10# mass. Remember force = mass times acceleration. A 100#
system is well suited for testing circuit cards and small
devices up to a few pounds, as tests are frequently specified up
to 10 G’s or so test level.
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