Jay - I ran the calculations for a single piece shaft based on Shaft Master's specs for an A340:
Material - 6161-T6
Tube OD - 3.00"
Tube Wall Thickness - 0.125"
Tube Length - 39"
Tube Weight - 4.66 lbs (calculator said 4.31 lbs)
Modulus of Elasticity - 10.0
Density - 0.098
Poly Foam Sound Deadener - Density: 1.0 - 1.3 lb/ft3
This yielded:
Critical speed at 12,480 shaft rpm
1/2 Critical Speed at 6,240 rpm
Torsional Yield at 1990 ft/lbs.
1/2 critical speed is important because a harmonic vibration at or near that speed can induce metal fatigue over time...you want to avoid it. On my tranny (A340), differential (3.91:1), and tire diameter (265x35/18) combo, I will not hit 1/2 critical speed until 120 mph. Assuming the shaft is balanced properly (which it is), the other reasons for a harmonic vibration are listed below...in any case, my normal operating speed is no where near 120 mph
It also appears the DS critical speed is well above the max the car is capable of...the biggest factor on a MkIII is the u-joint angle on a single piece shaft...will the increased angle induce vibration to the shaft? Reality is often quite different than theory...I'm going to ops test one and find out.
Copied from the calculator posted by Piratetip:
Material - 6161-T6
Tube OD - 3.00"
Tube Wall Thickness - 0.125"
Tube Length - 39"
Tube Weight - 4.66 lbs (calculator said 4.31 lbs)
Modulus of Elasticity - 10.0
Density - 0.098
Poly Foam Sound Deadener - Density: 1.0 - 1.3 lb/ft3
This yielded:
Critical speed at 12,480 shaft rpm
1/2 Critical Speed at 6,240 rpm
Torsional Yield at 1990 ft/lbs.
1/2 critical speed is important because a harmonic vibration at or near that speed can induce metal fatigue over time...you want to avoid it. On my tranny (A340), differential (3.91:1), and tire diameter (265x35/18) combo, I will not hit 1/2 critical speed until 120 mph. Assuming the shaft is balanced properly (which it is), the other reasons for a harmonic vibration are listed below...in any case, my normal operating speed is no where near 120 mph
It also appears the DS critical speed is well above the max the car is capable of...the biggest factor on a MkIII is the u-joint angle on a single piece shaft...will the increased angle induce vibration to the shaft? Reality is often quite different than theory...I'm going to ops test one and find out.
Copied from the calculator posted by Piratetip:
Important Critical Speed Information from Dana.com
1. A driveshaft that has the potential of operating above this "safe operating speed" could fail and could be thrown from under the vehicle or machine, which could cause serious injury or death to persons nearby.
2. The twice per revolution vibration characteristics of a cardan U-joint, operating at an angle, can produce a minor vibration if normal operating speed of the driveshaft is near 1/2 of its true critical speed.
A. Re-check the balance and runout of the driveshaft, because unbalance is the major factor in 1/2 critical vibrations. Reducing unbalance may cure this type of vibration problem.
B. Disconnect one end of the driveshaft, rotate the driveshaft 180 degrees and re-install it.
C. Reduce the u-joint operating angles of the driveshaft. (Remember to keep them equal as you change them).
D. Disconnect the driveshaft and remove the end yoke from the transmission or axle. Rotate the end yoke approximately 90 degrees and re-install it (torque the nut to specifications). Re-install the driveshaft.
E. Redesign the driveshaft(s) in the vehicle. Change to multiple driveshafts or change the length and/or tube diameter(s) of existing driveshafts to move the 1/2 critical speed of the assembly well out of the normal
3. An UNBALANCED driveshaft can experience a critical speed failure, in your balancer, at an RPM that is lower than the "SAFE OPERATING SPEED (RPM)" figure shown on the following screen.
4. The addition of cardboard liners or internal harmonic absorbers may need to be installed.