-
-
July 28, 2023 at 11:54 amNaresh JogiSubscriber
Hello, I'm trying to do a Transient analysis. My force is acting in a particular direction, I know the direction and magnitude. should I apply the force as Vecotr or change it to component and apply in that particular direction.Â
I tried both methods and the results are way-off.Â
Thank you
-
July 31, 2023 at 10:21 amSampat KumarAnsys Employee
Hi Naresh,
I don’t think it will make any difference unless and until you have considered different directions and the face where the force is applied. Will you please upload a screenshot of the simulation that you have performed? Please include the scoping area (faces or edges) where you have applied the force.
Regards,
SampatÂ
Â
-
July 31, 2023 at 11:11 amNaresh JogiSubscriber
Thank you for the reply, Unfortunately, I do not have the simulation files now. It was an old study, I applied the force in the same direction, and magnitude and scoped it to the same face but the results were different.Â
Anyhow I want to clarify it in the forum. I'll report if I see any difference in the future.Â
-
August 2, 2023 at 1:24 pmSampat KumarAnsys Employee
Thanks for the information.
I have tried at my end and I didn't find any difference in this. If you face any issues then feel free to ask here.
Regards,
Sampat
-
-
- The topic ‘Force defining in Vector Vs Components’ is closed to new replies.
- Speed up simulation in HFSS
- Workbench license error
- ansys fluent error when opening it “unexpected license problem”
- Unexpected error on Workbench: Root element not found.
- not able to get result
- Unable to recover corrupted project in Workbench
- Unattended (silent) installation of 2024R2 & -productfile switch
- Unexpected issues with SCCM deployment of Ansys Fluids and Structures 2024 R1
- Questions and recommendations: Septum Horn Antenna
- AQWA: Hydrodynamic response error
-
1191
-
513
-
488
-
225
-
209
© 2024 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.