Maybe I am late with this response, but I learned an analytical technique last year for finding the stresses in curved members.
Its called the "Winkler-Bach Method". It is based on the assumption that transverse planar sections in the curved parts of the member are do not deform. "plane sections remain plane".
If you still want to know about it let me know and I will show a quick analysis for one of the curved parts. With that, you should be able to do it for the rest of the curved parts.
Heres what you need to know first:
1) What is the radius of curvature of each of the bends. The drawing attached does not indicate this. THIS TECHNIQUE IS WORTHWHILE ONLY IF THE CURVATURE OF THE MEMBER IS COMPARABLE TO ITS CROSS-SECTIONAL DIAMETER
2) What is the maximum tensile strength the steel and safety factor in the design.
3) What failure criteria need to be considered for the material. I would probably put the maximum shear stress in the member at half the tensile strength of the material if cracks are not a concern.
4) Perform a static analysis to determine the forces and moments where the curved parts are tangent to the "straight" members. The forces and moments can be related to the applied load on the hook.
5) use My/I=-Ey/(r0-y)*r0*(1/r-1/r0)
M- moment acting on curved segment
Use principles from statics (Newtons 2nd law) to relate the applied load to 'M'
I- moment of inertia = pi*(1 inch)^4/32
y=d/2=0.5"
r0- distance from centroid of curved member to the location where the stress is to be determined
r- distance from center of curvature to location where stress is to be determined
I use this a lot with FEA to check the maximum stresses in a model (FEA results distribute stresses accurately, but the maximum values are often off by at least 10%, and usually 15% in my experience.)
If all you want to do is find the static loads and moments, you need to specify the location. My knowledge leads me to believe that the most stress will occur in one of the curved segments.
Justin
justin0741@msn.com
By the way, I am getting my masters next year (not related to materials though I've had quite a bit of training related to the subject), so if you're impressed tell your hiring manager.