dkrpink
Structural
- Jan 11, 2007
- 16
I am looking for some help in designing a double cantilevered beam. The member I am inquiring about is the beam on a "T" shaped structure and an "OFFSET T" structure. The structure is designed as a cantilevered column with a beam on top. The beam on the "T" shaped structure has spans equal in distances on each side of the column. The beam on the "OFFSET T" has one span significantly longer on one side of the column than the other. In both cases the connection of the beam to the column is designed to carry the moment at the location and the moment is then added to the moment in the cantilevered column.
With all of that said I have always designed the beam as two independent cantilevered beams with uniformly distributed loads utilizing M = w*L^2/2 and Deflection = (w*L^4)/(8*E*I).
I am beginning to believe that utilizing those equations yields a conservative solution. While I am ok with a conservative solution I am one who wants to ensure I am designing as tight as possible to be as economical as possible.
As such I am starting to believe that the moment and the deflection equations could be lowered due the beam being a single member the moments should transfer through the member and start counter acting/reducing each other. Similarly the deflection on one side should start counteracting/reducing the deflection on the other. I believe that as justification you can use many items as an argument. The first is using common sense and look at a see-saw or other type structures and you can see the counter acting affects. The second is a simple span beam with an overhang past one support and other multi span members where loads from other spans create reductions in adjacent spans.
I am sure you can put it in some finite element software and get an answer, but I feel you still should know what is governing the solution and why you get the answer you do. I also understand the fact that I need to take into consideration unbalanced loading, but that is not my main concern.
What I am looking for is a moment and a deflection equation for this condition. Anyone have these equations and a source? I believe the equations would look something like the equations found in Case 6 of Table 3-23 of the 13th edition of the AISC Steel Construction Manual; however adjusted for the actual beam support condition.
Also I am open to thoughts on my position of the moments and the deflections being reduced. Anyone have a legitimate reason why I should not consider them as counter acting?
With all of that said I have always designed the beam as two independent cantilevered beams with uniformly distributed loads utilizing M = w*L^2/2 and Deflection = (w*L^4)/(8*E*I).
I am beginning to believe that utilizing those equations yields a conservative solution. While I am ok with a conservative solution I am one who wants to ensure I am designing as tight as possible to be as economical as possible.
As such I am starting to believe that the moment and the deflection equations could be lowered due the beam being a single member the moments should transfer through the member and start counter acting/reducing each other. Similarly the deflection on one side should start counteracting/reducing the deflection on the other. I believe that as justification you can use many items as an argument. The first is using common sense and look at a see-saw or other type structures and you can see the counter acting affects. The second is a simple span beam with an overhang past one support and other multi span members where loads from other spans create reductions in adjacent spans.
I am sure you can put it in some finite element software and get an answer, but I feel you still should know what is governing the solution and why you get the answer you do. I also understand the fact that I need to take into consideration unbalanced loading, but that is not my main concern.
What I am looking for is a moment and a deflection equation for this condition. Anyone have these equations and a source? I believe the equations would look something like the equations found in Case 6 of Table 3-23 of the 13th edition of the AISC Steel Construction Manual; however adjusted for the actual beam support condition.
Also I am open to thoughts on my position of the moments and the deflections being reduced. Anyone have a legitimate reason why I should not consider them as counter acting?