One question, you are put the mass of human 784Newtons, its ok,but in simulation its selected FORCE per item, so you selected two items, two beams, should mass must be divided/2? so that half mass is on one beam, and half on another? thanks
You are right, you need to check if the force is applied "per item" like in this case and he selected 2 items, so he is applying the double of a person weight to the simulation, if he really wants to simulate exaclty if a person is sitting on the chair he needs to divide the force applied by the numer of items selected, or change the option from "per item" to "total"
When I perform a weldment simulation using SolidWorks, the program recognizes one of the elements as solid and the other elements as beams. However, it does not allow me to change the solid element to a beam. How can I resolve this problem? And thank you for making like this informative videos
Ok. I appreciate the hard work you have put into making this and explaining. But a little correction, You should not multiply 80 with 9.81 as the 80 is not the mass of person it is weight of the person measured on planet earth, which means it is already multiplied with 9.81. Weight (force) = 9.81 * Mass.
Actually, you are wrong. What you see in a balance is your mass. What the balance does is: It measures the force applied to it, then divide by the gravity, and then shows your mass. An adult man has somenthing near 80kg of mass, and 784 Newtons of weight.
@@pradeepdube1398 One question, you are put the mass of human 784Newtons, its ok,but in simulation its selected FORCE per item, so you selected two items, two beams, should mass must be divided/2? so that half mass is on one beam, and half on another? thanks
Exactly what I needed, thank you!
Thank you so much bro, you just saved my life 🥺🥺
😲 Thanks bro i love this tutorial 👍👍👍👍
One question, you are put the mass of human 784Newtons, its ok,but in simulation its selected FORCE per item, so you selected two items, two beams, should mass must be divided/2? so that half mass is on one beam, and half on another? thanks
You are right, you need to check if the force is applied "per item" like in this case and he selected 2 items, so he is applying the double of a person weight to the simulation, if he really wants to simulate exaclty if a person is sitting on the chair he needs to divide the force applied by the numer of items selected, or change the option from "per item" to "total"
Thank you for this video Usman!
Thank u brother for such a informative video 🙂. Keep it up like this 🤜🤛
When I perform a weldment simulation using SolidWorks, the program recognizes one of the elements as solid and the other elements as beams. However, it does not allow me to change the solid element to a beam. How can I resolve this problem?
And thank you for making like this informative videos
Thank you. Helped a lot
You're welcome!
Please make video for bolt connection and welding thickness calculation
Ok. I appreciate the hard work you have put into making this and explaining. But a little correction, You should not multiply 80 with 9.81 as the 80 is not the mass of person it is weight of the person measured on planet earth, which means it is already multiplied with 9.81. Weight (force) = 9.81 * Mass.
You are right. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Actually, you are wrong. What you see in a balance is your mass. What the balance does is: It measures the force applied to it, then divide by the gravity, and then shows your mass. An adult man has somenthing near 80kg of mass, and 784 Newtons of weight.
@@Realidade-Fascinante-1 You are right..
@@pradeepdube1398 One question, you are put the mass of human 784Newtons, its ok,but in simulation its selected FORCE per item, so you selected two items, two beams, should mass must be divided/2? so that half mass is on one beam, and half on another? thanks
Thank you so much, yo deserve many likes. I was having troubles for many days with my design, but you saved me ♥
Thank you very much for your feedback
Need more simulation videos
Thank you so much i like it.
thanks for the great work
Bhai Jan urdo ma bnya krain plz