penpe
Structural
- Nov 27, 2012
- 68
Outdoor cable tray is subject to the typical elements: Wind, Snow, Ice, Seismic. Our current project is located where the design ice thickness per ASCE7-16 is 1.5". Doing calcs according to ASCE the ice cross-sect area on each rail Ai = (pi) x ice thick x (channel diagonal measure + ice thickness). Each rail 7.4" tall has area of ice 40 in^2 per the formula. Per foot of length that's 480 in^3 per foot per rail. Ice density is 56 pcf, so two rails' ice load comes to 31 lbs/ft. If the tray is full of low voltage cable, and ice covers the surface it might be analyzed as a cover plate where Vi = (pi) x ice thick x plate area. Where cable tray is 36" wide Vi = 1936 in^3 per foot. 56 pcf density result is 63 pounds per foot. Ice total weight is 94 pounds per foot. Using max span of column-supported cable tray the total load shouldn't exceed 103 plf, including cable, snow and ice. The snow load in this area comes to about 45 pounds per foot. We've got a problem! (sidenote: A contradiction here is that if there's no cable in the tray the ice can't accumulate on the surface).
The cable tray manufacturer Eaton's B-Line design guide prescribes a method for ice loads: ice in pounds per foot = (cable tray width x max ice thick)/144 x ice density of 57pcf. For 36" tray this comes to only 21.4 pounds per foot! That's less than 25% of the load I've computed per ASCE.
For CYA reasons we like to include on our drawings what is max cable load, but these ice loads are so far apart it's hard to arrive at a compromise, or even feel comfortable leaning toward either.
Of course we don't want to reduce the span which would add twenty columns and foundations because of this crazy ASCE ice number.
Any suggestions?
The cable tray manufacturer Eaton's B-Line design guide prescribes a method for ice loads: ice in pounds per foot = (cable tray width x max ice thick)/144 x ice density of 57pcf. For 36" tray this comes to only 21.4 pounds per foot! That's less than 25% of the load I've computed per ASCE.
For CYA reasons we like to include on our drawings what is max cable load, but these ice loads are so far apart it's hard to arrive at a compromise, or even feel comfortable leaning toward either.
Of course we don't want to reduce the span which would add twenty columns and foundations because of this crazy ASCE ice number.
Any suggestions?