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Mechanical Environment Test Specifications Derived from Equivalent Energy in Fixed Base Modes, with Frequency Shifts from Unit-to-Unit Variability

Skousen, Troy J.; Mayes, R.L.

The purpose of mechanical environment testing is to prove that designs can withstand the loads imparted on them under operating conditions. This is dependent not only on the test article construction but also on the loads imparted through its boundary conditions. Current practices develop environment test specifications from field responses using a single degree of freedom input control with no consideration for the mild to severe deviations from the field motion caused by the laboratory boundary condition. Test specifications are considered conservative with the assumption that most of the steps taken to generate them (e.g., straight-line envelopes and adding 3 dB) result in appropriately conservative specifications. However, without an accurate quantifiable measure of conservatism, designs can be easily mis-tested yielding unnecessarily high costs. Previous work showed a modal model for components excited through base-mounted fixtures to generate specifications with much lower uncertainty and with guaranteed quantifiable conservatism. The method focused on reproducing in-service modal energy in the test configuration by controlling the 6 degree-of-freedom input motion. That work generated test specifications with enough conservatism to account for unit-to-unit variability in the damping of the test article. This paper focuses on generating conservative specifications while considering resonant frequency shifts as a parameter for unit-to-unit variability.