abuchman
Structural
- Jun 12, 2019
- 7
thread507-447086
I'm designing a monorail that will be used as a fall protection device over a train car. The owner wants the system to be designed for an occupancy of 2 people.
My understanding from reading OSHA is that each anchor point needs to be designed for 2 times the MAF, which for a full body harness would be 1,800 lbs. To me, this means that the factored load is 3,600 lbs (i.e. no other load factors applied).
My question is in regards to multiple occupancy. OSHA does not seem to land firmly on this issue. Should a system with 2 occupants assume that both occupants fall simultaneously (applied load of 7,200 lbs)? Or should it be a single occupant (applied load of 3,600 lbs) Or should the assumption be that one person has fallen and another is falling (3600 lbs + a static load)? 7,200 lbs seems excessive, but a single load of 3,600 lbs doesn't seem correct either. I'm looking for something like a multiple presence factor that exists in bridge design and I can't find it.
Also, the system will be need to be load tested. Should it be load tested to 2 times the MAF, or to the standard 125% of the MAF - 2,250 lbs. Similarly, should it be for 2 occupants at 2,250 lbs or one static load of 250 lbs and one load of 2,250 lbs.
Any input would be appreciated. Thanks!
I'm designing a monorail that will be used as a fall protection device over a train car. The owner wants the system to be designed for an occupancy of 2 people.
My understanding from reading OSHA is that each anchor point needs to be designed for 2 times the MAF, which for a full body harness would be 1,800 lbs. To me, this means that the factored load is 3,600 lbs (i.e. no other load factors applied).
My question is in regards to multiple occupancy. OSHA does not seem to land firmly on this issue. Should a system with 2 occupants assume that both occupants fall simultaneously (applied load of 7,200 lbs)? Or should it be a single occupant (applied load of 3,600 lbs) Or should the assumption be that one person has fallen and another is falling (3600 lbs + a static load)? 7,200 lbs seems excessive, but a single load of 3,600 lbs doesn't seem correct either. I'm looking for something like a multiple presence factor that exists in bridge design and I can't find it.
Also, the system will be need to be load tested. Should it be load tested to 2 times the MAF, or to the standard 125% of the MAF - 2,250 lbs. Similarly, should it be for 2 occupants at 2,250 lbs or one static load of 250 lbs and one load of 2,250 lbs.
Any input would be appreciated. Thanks!