Dropout
Chemical
- Apr 25, 2005
- 7
Hi All.
I'm trying to figure out where to start so I can figure out what I need to do to support some tanks on a warehouse floor.
It's an old Canadian military warehouse with a poured concrete floor and ceiling. Unfortunately we can't get any information on the floor since some of the original drawings are lost. I do know that it's about 7" thick.
The tanks we need to bring in weigh about 135,000 lbs each and sit on four 16" by 16" square pads. This would give a floor loading of just under 20,000 lbs. per square foot which I'm told is too high.
On the other hand, pallet racking with six 2,000 lb skids has a foot print of 0.38 square feet and a floor load of 30,000 pounds per square foot. We used to do that without thinking about it.
Where do I start?
I'm trying to figure out where to start so I can figure out what I need to do to support some tanks on a warehouse floor.
It's an old Canadian military warehouse with a poured concrete floor and ceiling. Unfortunately we can't get any information on the floor since some of the original drawings are lost. I do know that it's about 7" thick.
The tanks we need to bring in weigh about 135,000 lbs each and sit on four 16" by 16" square pads. This would give a floor loading of just under 20,000 lbs. per square foot which I'm told is too high.
On the other hand, pallet racking with six 2,000 lb skids has a foot print of 0.38 square feet and a floor load of 30,000 pounds per square foot. We used to do that without thinking about it.
Where do I start?