metalchair
Structural
- Oct 25, 2022
- 13
Hello All,
A quick conceptual question regarding supporting an existing beam and the sequence of loads. For this conceptual question, assume a uniform load over the length of the beam.
I have a condition where I have a roof beam that is currently supporting load. A client has asked to add additional loading to this beam in which it will now be failing in bending. The beam in question is currently single-span, simply supported. If i were to add a support post at mid-span, creating a two-span continuous condition, would additional load added after the post is installed begin to "cancel" out the original bending stress?
Again, assuming all load is uniform, I believe in theory, there should be a new added load after the post is installed that will effectively reduce the bending stress at the center (original mid-span/new post location) to zero. At center span, the original condition is in positive bending, after the post is added, the same location is now a negative bending location.
A quick conceptual question regarding supporting an existing beam and the sequence of loads. For this conceptual question, assume a uniform load over the length of the beam.
I have a condition where I have a roof beam that is currently supporting load. A client has asked to add additional loading to this beam in which it will now be failing in bending. The beam in question is currently single-span, simply supported. If i were to add a support post at mid-span, creating a two-span continuous condition, would additional load added after the post is installed begin to "cancel" out the original bending stress?
Again, assuming all load is uniform, I believe in theory, there should be a new added load after the post is installed that will effectively reduce the bending stress at the center (original mid-span/new post location) to zero. At center span, the original condition is in positive bending, after the post is added, the same location is now a negative bending location.