• Welcome to CableDataSheet, Cable and Wire Technical Consulting Service.
 

News:

You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
Tacettin İKİZ



Main Menu

What is the fleet angle during the cable unwind for mobile applications?

Started by tacettin, September 17, 2024, 03:41:33 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

tacettin

What is the fleet angle during the cable unwind for mobile applications?

What is fleet angle? Fleet angle is the angle between the wire rope and an imaginary line extending perpendicular to the drum. This angle varies with the width of the drum and the distance between the lead sheave and the drum. The proper fleet angle helps the wire rope to wind evenly onto the drum, and helps to reduce wear to the wire rope, drum, and lead sheave. Too large a fleet angle will cause the wire rope to wind loosely, overlap and possibly jump the flange and cause severe damage to the equipment. That's why it's important to properly distance the winch from the lead sheave (also sometimes called fixed sheave) when you are determining where to position your winch. A maximum fleet angle of 1-1/2° for smooth drums, and 2° for grooved drums, helps the wire rope wind uniformly. A narrower drum can also help stay within the recommended fleet angle if the critical fleet angle distance can't be improved. Diagrams below are examples of common rigging layouts that show where critical fleet angle distances are to be measured so you can stay within the proper maximum fleet angle.


You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login

tacettin



The achievement of even winding on a smooth faced drum is closely related to the magnitude of the D/d ratio, the speed of rotation, load on the rope, and the fleet angle. Of all these factors, the one that exerts perhaps the greatest influence on winding characteristics is the fleet angle.

The schematic drawing (Fig. 39) shows an installation where the wire rope runs from a fixed sheave, over a floating sheave, and then on to the surface of a smooth drum. The fleet angle (Fig. 39) may be defined as the included angle between two lines; one line drawn through the middle of the fixed sheave and the drum – and perpendicular to the axis of the drum and a second line drawn from the flange of the drum to the base of the groove in the sheave. (The drum flange represents the farthest position to which the rope can travel across the drum.) There are left and right fleet angles, measured to the left or right of the center line of the sheave, respectively.

It is necessary to restrict the fleet angle on installations where wire rope passes over the lead or fixed sheave and onto a drum. For optimum efficiency and service characteristics, the angle here should not exceed 1 1/2º for a smooth drum, or 2º for a grooved drum. Fleet angles larger than these suggested limits can cause such problems as bad winding on smooth drums, and the rope rubbing against the flanges of the sheave grooves. Larger angles also create situations where there is excessive crushing and abrasion of the rope on the drum. Conversely, small fleet angles – less than 1/2º – should also be avoided since too small an angle will cause the rope to pile up.


Source: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login

Document echo ' ';