butch81385
Structural
- Dec 17, 2008
- 19
We are having an internal discussion at my office regarding steel cables. Take the following scenario:
5 bays (6 supports) with a steel cable taking the loads. The loads may be on every bay, or may be on as little as one bay (or any combination in between). Does it change the max end reaction of the exterior supports if the interior supports are continuous cable (no horizontal resistance except the tension in the cable) vs. segmented (5 individual spans)?
I would assume that, in essence, it is similar to looking at the horizontal reactions of a statically indeterminate beam with rollers as the internal supports. Unfortunately we do not have a good computer program to do this, nor the time to do it by hand. So I come to see what you great people know about the situation.
5 bays (6 supports) with a steel cable taking the loads. The loads may be on every bay, or may be on as little as one bay (or any combination in between). Does it change the max end reaction of the exterior supports if the interior supports are continuous cable (no horizontal resistance except the tension in the cable) vs. segmented (5 individual spans)?
I would assume that, in essence, it is similar to looking at the horizontal reactions of a statically indeterminate beam with rollers as the internal supports. Unfortunately we do not have a good computer program to do this, nor the time to do it by hand. So I come to see what you great people know about the situation.