Vilhelm
Structural
- Jan 4, 2006
- 3
One of my clients was modifying a bridge crane. Based on calculations, I recommended the following for each of the two bridge beams: W30x108 with a C15x33.9 channel cap welded to the top flange. The bridge span was 60'-5" fron center to center of rails. The capacity of the hoist was only 15 tons.
I'm confident that the member sizes were structurally adequate for vertical loading (including impact) and for the horizontal/lateral load acting on the bridge girders.
However, after installation, when the trolley is moving across the bridge girders (even with no loading), excessive vibration occurrs in the bridge girders themselves. The movement appears to be primarily torsional and is unacceptable. The bottom flange moves back and forth (cyclically) as the girder twists from one side to the other.
We are having the trolley checked to make sure that it is aligned and riding properly on the rails secured to the top of the girders. It appears unlikely that this is the case, but I feel the need to rule it out.
The issue is not the lack of proper end restraint for the girders as they have a fixed connection (torsionally) to the end trucks.
Has anyone observed this type of dynamic movement, or better yet, have a recommendation for remediation?
One potential thought is to "box" the girders by welding plates on both sides of each girder connecting the top and bottom flanges together, to help resist torsion. But that option may be prohibitively expensive.
Another thought is to install a channel cap on the bottom flange to resist the lateral displacement. But I can't recommend this fix unless I know that it will work.
Since the bottom flange is always in tension, I never imagined that lateral bracing of the bottom flange would be required.
Any help or insight would be greatly appreciated.
I'm confident that the member sizes were structurally adequate for vertical loading (including impact) and for the horizontal/lateral load acting on the bridge girders.
However, after installation, when the trolley is moving across the bridge girders (even with no loading), excessive vibration occurrs in the bridge girders themselves. The movement appears to be primarily torsional and is unacceptable. The bottom flange moves back and forth (cyclically) as the girder twists from one side to the other.
We are having the trolley checked to make sure that it is aligned and riding properly on the rails secured to the top of the girders. It appears unlikely that this is the case, but I feel the need to rule it out.
The issue is not the lack of proper end restraint for the girders as they have a fixed connection (torsionally) to the end trucks.
Has anyone observed this type of dynamic movement, or better yet, have a recommendation for remediation?
One potential thought is to "box" the girders by welding plates on both sides of each girder connecting the top and bottom flanges together, to help resist torsion. But that option may be prohibitively expensive.
Another thought is to install a channel cap on the bottom flange to resist the lateral displacement. But I can't recommend this fix unless I know that it will work.
Since the bottom flange is always in tension, I never imagined that lateral bracing of the bottom flange would be required.
Any help or insight would be greatly appreciated.