Hollow circular tube versus hollow rectangular shaft

AI Thread Summary
A hollow circular tube and a hollow rectangular shaft made of the same aluminum material and thickness have different bending resistance characteristics. The circular tube resists bending uniformly in all directions, while the rectangular shaft is stiffer in horizontal and vertical directions but weaker when bent diagonally. The stiffness ratio indicates that the square tube is approximately 1.7 times stiffer than the circular tube. However, the square tube's stiffness in bending is not as apparent as that of the circular tube. Overall, the choice between the two shapes depends on the specific bending direction and application requirements.
daniel wood
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Sportnut:
If I am using exact same aluminum material, with exact same thickness of gauge and I construct a 4ft long hollow circular tube that is 1" diameter, and I also construct a 4ft long hollow rectangular shaft that is 1" square, which would be more resistant to bending?
 
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Hard to say, but the circular pipe would resist bending equally in all directions. Whereas the square pipe would be great in horizontal and vertical directions but would quickly fail if you tried to bend it along a diagonal (making it diamond-shaped)
 
Thanks Bill. I appreciate your response.
 
The square tube would be stiffer because more of the material is further from the centerline.

The stiffness ratio (from the second moments of area) is (1/12) / (pi/64) = about 1.7

Post #2 is wrong. The square tube is also equally stiff for bending in any direction, though this is not so "obvious" as it is for a circular tube.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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