![ansys 11 a11calc.exe ansys 11 a11calc.exe](https://www.pdsvision.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/1ansysmiko.png)
![ansys 11 a11calc.exe ansys 11 a11calc.exe](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-9djI6W3WWAo/Tk6rNoWk7ZI/AAAAAAAAACo/3aWnYGUa1JQ/s1600/12.png)
Assume that the crank is attached rigidly to a fixed shaft fitted into the hole near the left end of the crank. Using ANSYS, determine the mechanical response due to a load of 100 lbf applied vertically downward at the end of the pedal shaft as shown in the figure below. The material they selected has an Young's modulus E=2.8x10 7 psi and Poisson ratio ν=0.3. To protect their reputation, they have outsourced the task of analyzing the crank to you, providing you with the geometry of the bicycle crank and attached pedal shaft shown below. Problem SpecificationĪ preeminent bicycle company is disappointed with the negative feedback they have received on their latest model, and they have pinpointed the problem to an outdated bicycle crank design that they assumed would still withstand typical loads. It seems that some paths must be added to PATH environmental variable.įinally, I have to point out that ANSYS Version 11.0 Service Pack 1 - Platform Support Table says RHEL 4.0 not 4.5! So maybe if I was using over 4 years old OS, everything would work out of box.The following ANSYS tutorial is under construction.
ANSYS 11 A11CALC.EXE HOW TO
If someone knows, how to fix it, I would be very grateful. However, since I do not need to use CFX I did not spend any time trying to make it work. I get en error /var/tmp/anslaunch110.chris.12.sh: line 3: cfx5: command not found The same situation is in CentOS 5.2. This was not the only problem with ANSYS. One would expect that when ANSYS claims that something is supported it would work out of the box. It appears that that similar problems occur whether I was using officially supported OS than not supported. So, in my case there was no apparent advantage in using RHEL4.5 over CentOS5.2. Very similar problems were found when the same ANSYS 11 SP1 was installed on CentOS5.2 on the same machine. Once the package was installed, libXm.so.3 was also located in /usr/X11R6/lib64/. This package can be found on RHEL4.5 installation CDs/DVD.
![ansys 11 a11calc.exe ansys 11 a11calc.exe](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/JrnndT8TqOU/hqdefault.jpg)
ANSYS 11 A11CALC.EXE INSTALL
The only thing I had to do, was to install 64bit version rpm -ivh openmotif-2.2.3-10.1.el4.x86_64.rpm Openmotif package contains libraries of graphical user interface that is used in ANSYS. My RHEL4.5 and ANSYS were for x86_64 platform. This library belongs to openmotif package, however in my case I had 32bit version of this package. To do this I did as a root: find / -name "libXm.so.3"As a result I found this library in /usr/X11R6/lib/. The error was: /usr/ansys_inc/v110/ansys/bin/linem64t/ansys.e110: error while loading shared libraries: libXm.so.3: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory Therefore, the first thing I did was to check if my RHEL4.5 comes with this library. However, although installation along with setting licence went smooth, I had problems starting ANSYS. One would expect that installing and running ANSYS on this OS would be painless.
![ansys 11 a11calc.exe ansys 11 a11calc.exe](https://www.ansys.com/content/dam/company/brand/logos/ansys-logos/ansys-logo.jpg)
According to ANSYS Version 11.0 Service Pack 1 - Platform Support Table, ANSYS 11 SP1 for Intel Xeon EM64T/AMD Opteron is fully supported on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.0.