-
-
April 13, 2023 at 3:38 pm
christopher.smyrek
SubscriberHey together,
I need to evaluate bolts in detail. And i am extracting the reaction forces out of my model to do an VDI2230 assessment, based on the FE results.
I need to create the force and moment reactions for every bolt by hand. Now I asking myself if there is a faster method to do it automaticaly or to extract the reaction loads for all bolts. The object generation does not work for that.
-
April 15, 2023 at 6:02 pm
Michael Thompson
Subscriber
Have you tried the Bolt Tools Add On for Mechanical (2022.2 and above). This has a feature to automate force and moment reaction probes with a CS per the local orientation of the bolt. This can either be done by creating a construction surface that splits the bolt shank, or you can post process on the bolt seating faces the reaction loads.
Once you have automatically created the objects in the tree (can be for single time point, all, or user selection) these values are auto-generated into a .csv report that can further be used to do post processing in Excel for example.
After you have done post in Excel, you can finally use the tool to cross-reference between the final results and the objects in the Mechanical tree.
To access this functionality go to Add Ons on the ribbon and active Bolt Tools.
In the new Bolt Tools tab in the ribbon go to: Wizards>Reaction Probes Wizard
This will bring up a side panel to interact with and start the automation process per the above description.-
April 24, 2023 at 3:14 pm
christopher.smyrek
Subscriberwow thats really great. I missed that tool during the last update!
It is creating the full reaction force for all the bolts in the csv file. I need to adapt the interface of my bolt evaluation, but at the end this is what i searched for!
Thanks a lot!
-
-
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Boost Ansys Fluent Simulations with AWS
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) helps engineers design products in which the flow of fluid components is a significant challenge. These different use cases often require large complex models to solve on a traditional workstation. Click here to join this event to learn how to leverage Ansys Fluids on the cloud, thanks to Ansys Gateway powered by AWS.

Earth Rescue – An Ansys Online Series
The climate crisis is here. But so is the human ingenuity to fight it. Earth Rescue reveals what visionary companies are doing today to engineer radical new ideas in the fight against climate change. Click here to watch the first episode.

Ansys Blog
Subscribe to the Ansys Blog to get great new content about the power of simulation delivered right to your email on a weekly basis. With content from Ansys experts, partners and customers you will learn about product development advances, thought leadership and trends and tips to better use Ansys tools. Sign up here.
- Solver Pivot Warning in Beam Element Model
- Saving & sharing of Working project files in .wbpz format
- Understanding Force Convergence Solution Output
- An Unknown error occurred during solution. Check the Solver Output…..
- What is the difference between bonded contact region and fixed joint
- User manual
- The solver engine was unable to converge on a solution for the nonlinear problem as constrained.
- whether have the difference between using contact and target bodies
- material damping and modal analysis
- Colors and Mesh Display
-
5162
-
3275
-
2453
-
1308
-
960
© 2023 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.