-
-
July 20, 2021 at 11:36 am
Arunkumarmoovandan37
SubscriberHi all,
I've designed a drone with propellers and I'm simulating it in fluent.
Entire model is tilted at 30deg.
What should be the rotational axis direction inorder to spin propellers in fluent
July 20, 2021 at 12:32 pmRob
Forum ModeratorIt'll be a function of +y and -x to suit the 30 degree tilt. We use the right hand rule to then determine whether the rotation speed is + or -
July 20, 2021 at 1:02 pmKarthik Remella
AdministratorHello The easiest way to move forward would be to reorient the mesh by rotating it by 30 degs so that your axis of rotation points along the y-axis. You can then use (0, 1, 0) if you wish an anti-clockwise rotation in the XZ plane.
Karthik
Viewing 2 reply threads- The topic ‘What should be the rotational axis direction for this drone model’ is closed to new replies.
Innovation SpaceTrending discussions- air flow in and out of computer case
- Varying Bond model parameters to mimic soil particle cohesion/stiction
- Eroded Mass due to Erosion of Soil Particles by Fluids
- I am doing a corona simulation. But particles are not spreading.
- Centrifugal Fan Analysis for Determination of Characteristic Curve
- Guidance needed for Conjugate Heat Transfer Analysis for a 3s3p Li-ion Battery
- Issue to compile a UDF in ANSYS Fluent
- JACOBI Convergence Issue in ANSYS AQWA
- affinity not set
- Resuming SAG Mill Simulation with New Particle Batch in Rocky
Top Contributors-
4167
-
1487
-
1338
-
1188
-
1021
Top Rated Tags© 2025 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.
Ansys does not support the usage of unauthorized Ansys software. Please visit www.ansys.com to obtain an official distribution.
-
The Ansys Learning Forum is a public forum. You are prohibited from providing (i) information that is confidential to You, your employer, or any third party, (ii) Personal Data or individually identifiable health information, (iii) any information that is U.S. Government Classified, Controlled Unclassified Information, International Traffic in Arms Regulators (ITAR) or Export Administration Regulators (EAR) controlled or otherwise have been determined by the United States Government or by a foreign government to require protection against unauthorized disclosure for reasons of national security, or (iv) topics or information restricted by the People's Republic of China data protection and privacy laws.
