bnickeson
Structural
- Apr 7, 2009
- 81
I've got a fairly unique problem. I'm designing a structure with wire cables that is to have LED Christmas lights hung on it from a tall tower. The tower has a ring beam attached at the top and there is a ring beam of larger diameter at the bottom that is anchored to the ground with columns. Stretching between these two ring beams are 84 wire cables in a circle with LED's on them that form a Christmas tree of lights. Each wire is approximately 78 feet long. I am analyzing the "tree structure" in RISA to determine ring beam forces, column forces and uplift, and tension in the wires. Unfortunately, since RISA isn't a non-linear program it won't do catenary action of the wires, so I am forced to basically fake this force in using thermal loads to create the tension. This is all fairly well and good until I get to the wind forces. Catenary tension and cable deflection is pretty easy to determine as long as you have fixed ends on either side of the cable. However, in my case since the ring beams have some flexibility and there is a spring on one end of each wire, the determination of the catenary tension and its equivalent thermal load isn't as easy.
With a fixed end condition, the cable develops 625 pounds of tension under a 2.2 plf load and 32" deflection. My question is fairly simple: if I effectively have springs on the end of this cable, will it still have the 625 pounds of tension due to the same wind load? Intuitively, it doesn't seem like it would since your y_max (deflection) would get larger thus your P (tension) would get smaller assuming the same distributed load. But since this is a horizontal force on a fairly vertical wire (and ignoring self weight) I wasn't sure if that was necessarily the case from an outside force. I couldn't find any literature that addresses spring end conditions
Basically what I'd like to do is to take a wire into a separate RISA model, determine the thermal load required to create a 625 pound load with fixed ends, then apply that exact same thermal load to all of the wires in the tower model. Obviously, since those wires have springs on the end you will not develop a 625 pound tension load in the wires, but I don't know if that is realistically accurate or not when a wind load is applied. Does anyone know if this is an acceptable way of modeling this problem? Or I suppose, could anyone check this in SAP2000 or another non-linear analysis program?
Thanks.
With a fixed end condition, the cable develops 625 pounds of tension under a 2.2 plf load and 32" deflection. My question is fairly simple: if I effectively have springs on the end of this cable, will it still have the 625 pounds of tension due to the same wind load? Intuitively, it doesn't seem like it would since your y_max (deflection) would get larger thus your P (tension) would get smaller assuming the same distributed load. But since this is a horizontal force on a fairly vertical wire (and ignoring self weight) I wasn't sure if that was necessarily the case from an outside force. I couldn't find any literature that addresses spring end conditions
Basically what I'd like to do is to take a wire into a separate RISA model, determine the thermal load required to create a 625 pound load with fixed ends, then apply that exact same thermal load to all of the wires in the tower model. Obviously, since those wires have springs on the end you will not develop a 625 pound tension load in the wires, but I don't know if that is realistically accurate or not when a wind load is applied. Does anyone know if this is an acceptable way of modeling this problem? Or I suppose, could anyone check this in SAP2000 or another non-linear analysis program?
Thanks.