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RecurDyn Elearning Start FreeFallingBall English

1. The document describes using RecurDyn software to model a falling ball and analyze its motion over time. 2. An ellipsoid body representing the ball is created at a point 1000 mm above the origin and given a mass of 1 kg. 3. A dynamic analysis is run over 1 second of simulated time. 4. Plots of the ball's position, velocity, and acceleration over time are generated and values at 1 second are checked, showing the ball falling as expected under gravity.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views9 pages

RecurDyn Elearning Start FreeFallingBall English

1. The document describes using RecurDyn software to model a falling ball and analyze its motion over time. 2. An ellipsoid body representing the ball is created at a point 1000 mm above the origin and given a mass of 1 kg. 3. A dynamic analysis is run over 1 second of simulated time. 4. Plots of the ball's position, velocity, and acceleration over time are generated and values at 1 second are checked, showing the ball falling as expected under gravity.

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tm
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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2

1. Double-click the RecurDyn 1


icon on the Desktop to run
RecurDyn.
2. Enter "Free_Falling_Ball" in
the Name box and click OK
to create a new model.
1. On the toolbar, click the
Grid button to display the
grid. 1
2. On the Professional tab, in
the Body group, click
Ellipsoid.
2
3. Click to select Point,
Distance for the modeling
option.
4. Click the point (0, 1000, 0) 3 5
on the work pane utilizing 4
the displayed grid.
5. Enter "100" for the distance
of an ellipsoid.
1. On the database pane to
the right, right-click the
Ellipsoid Body that you
created, and then click 2
Rename.
2. Change the name to
Falling_Ball. 1
1. Right-click the ball that you
created, and then click
Properties. 2
2. In the Properties of
Falling_Ball dialog box, click 3
the Body tab, and click to
select User Input for the
Material Input Type.
3. Enter "1" for the Mass.
4. Click OK to apply the
changes and close the
dialog box. 1 4
1. On the Analysis tab, in the 1
Simulation Type group, click
Dyn/Kin
(Dynamic/Kinematic
Analysis).
2. In the dialog box, click the
General tab, and enter “1" 2
for the End Time.
3. Click Simulate.

3
1. On the Analysis tab, in the
1
Scope group, click Entity.
2. In the Scope Entity dialog
box, enter "Distance" in the
Name box. 2 Ball position in the y-direction over time
3. Click the Et button next to 3
the Entity Name box to
select the created ellipsoid. 4
4. Click to select Pos_TY for
5
Component (the ball 6
position in the y-direction).
5. Click to select
Ground.InertiaMarker for
Reference Frame.
6. Select the Display check
box and click OK to apply
the changes.
1. On the Analysis tab, in the
Plot group, click Plot. 1
2. On the Plot database pane
to the right, click Bodies,
click Falling_Ball, and then
double-click Pos_TY.
3. Click the Data Editor button.
3
4. Scroll the data sheet that
appears below to the right
and check the ball position
on the y-axis when time is 1 2
second. Ball position in the y-direction over time
1. Click Add.
1
2. For the added chart, on the
Plot database pane to the
right, click Bodies, click
Falling_Ball, and then
double-click Vel_TY.
3. Double-click Acc_TY as in
step 2. 4
4. Click the Data Editor button.
2
5. Check the results on the
data sheet below when time
is 1 second.
3

5
• Refer to the analysis results RecurDyn Results
of RecurDyn and calculate
Distance traveled after 1 second : 2903.32 𝑚𝑚
kinetic energy when time is 1
second. Velocity after 1 second : −9806.6 𝑚𝑚/𝑠
▶ s=Distance Acceleration after 1 second : −9806.6 𝑚𝑚/𝑠 2
▶ a=Acceleration
▶ t=Time
▶ v=Velocity Analytical Solution
1
▶ m=mass 𝑠 = 𝑎𝑡 2 = 2903.32
2
𝑣 = 𝑎𝑡 = 9806.6 𝑚𝑚/𝑠
𝑎 = 𝑔 = 9806.6 𝑚𝑚/𝑠 2
1 1
𝐾𝐸 = 𝑚𝑣 = × 1𝑘𝑔 × (9806.6 𝑚𝑚/𝑠)2 = 4.8085𝑒7 𝑘𝑔 ∙ 𝑚𝑚2 /𝑠 2
2
2 2
Conversion to N: 1𝑁 = 1(𝑘𝑔 ∙ 𝑚/𝑠 2 )
𝑚𝑚2 1m
𝐾𝐸 = 4.8085𝑒7 ×[ 𝑘𝑔 ∙ (100mm)] × 𝑚𝑚 = 48085.2 𝑁 ∙ 𝑚𝑚
𝑠2

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