NBEEBE
Structural
- Mar 12, 2010
- 10
I'm looking for some insight on the affects of improper heat cambering of beams. I have two possible situations that I'm wondering about:
1. Beams are heated beyond acceptable temperatures (1200deg) and quenched (water cooled via garden hose) once in "desired" position.
2. Beams are NOT heated beyond acceptable but are still rapidly water cooled.
The members that this pertains to are already erected and are supporting a concrete slab. the beams are showing deflection much greater than anticipated and the finger is being pointed at the company who performed the cambering. Reports show that camber was correct and within tolerance (-0" +1/2") prior to leaving their shop.
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I'm NOT an engineer or a chemist by any means but my thoughts (besides both methods being completely unacceptable) are that:
For #1: The steel is being heated to a point of the "atomic structure" becoming non-uniform (non homogeneous), and then rapidly cooled which might be resulting in this non uniform structure being the final "weaker" configuration.... Could this cause the steel to deflect "easier"?
For#2: The steel in the locally heated and rapidly cooled areas is less ductile and more prone to cracking rather than bending/deflecting. There are currently no signs of fracture that we know of.
I may be way off base here so any insight or thoughts on this would be great.
1. Beams are heated beyond acceptable temperatures (1200deg) and quenched (water cooled via garden hose) once in "desired" position.
2. Beams are NOT heated beyond acceptable but are still rapidly water cooled.
The members that this pertains to are already erected and are supporting a concrete slab. the beams are showing deflection much greater than anticipated and the finger is being pointed at the company who performed the cambering. Reports show that camber was correct and within tolerance (-0" +1/2") prior to leaving their shop.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm NOT an engineer or a chemist by any means but my thoughts (besides both methods being completely unacceptable) are that:
For #1: The steel is being heated to a point of the "atomic structure" becoming non-uniform (non homogeneous), and then rapidly cooled which might be resulting in this non uniform structure being the final "weaker" configuration.... Could this cause the steel to deflect "easier"?
For#2: The steel in the locally heated and rapidly cooled areas is less ductile and more prone to cracking rather than bending/deflecting. There are currently no signs of fracture that we know of.
I may be way off base here so any insight or thoughts on this would be great.