Aj Mech
Mechanical
- Aug 5, 2021
- 1
Hello Forum,
I hope you all are doing good. I am currently working on a column design for tie-rod jib crane/suspended jib crane (1000lbs capacity). As I have never done this before, I need some guidance on solving this problem. You can find the drawing of jib crane attached (image 1). From the crane supplier general arrangement diagram, I can see the thrust and pull as 4.2kip. Using Fisher and Thomas report (Image 2) on jib crane design, I calculated the horizontal and vertical forces that act on column. My question at this point is, is the horizontal force = pull/thrust mentioned in the supplier diagram, vertical force = axial load acting on column.
The column is a hollow square, of 7in x 7in outer, 6.25inx6.25in inside, length 187.25in. End conditions: bottom is fixed (welded to base plate and anchored to concrete floor, top :free). I calculated moment of inertia, critical axial load, radius of gyration. To evaluate column classification, I also calculated slenderness ratio which came out to be long column. I believe since the vertical load that I calculated above is well below the critical axial load in this step, I believe the column can withstand the jib crane at full load capacity. (25% design factor = 1250lbs).
I tried researching on circular base plate calculation, but I couldn't find any. If anybody could direct me towards the design on circular base plate (min thickness, bolt distance), it would be greatly appreciated. My potential failure mode calculation would be, steel strength tension on anchor, concrete breakout strength in tension, pullout strength tension of anchor and bolt thread pullout. Any directions to solve this problem would be helpful.
Concrete is 2500PSI and 6in thick.
I hope you all are doing good. I am currently working on a column design for tie-rod jib crane/suspended jib crane (1000lbs capacity). As I have never done this before, I need some guidance on solving this problem. You can find the drawing of jib crane attached (image 1). From the crane supplier general arrangement diagram, I can see the thrust and pull as 4.2kip. Using Fisher and Thomas report (Image 2) on jib crane design, I calculated the horizontal and vertical forces that act on column. My question at this point is, is the horizontal force = pull/thrust mentioned in the supplier diagram, vertical force = axial load acting on column.
The column is a hollow square, of 7in x 7in outer, 6.25inx6.25in inside, length 187.25in. End conditions: bottom is fixed (welded to base plate and anchored to concrete floor, top :free). I calculated moment of inertia, critical axial load, radius of gyration. To evaluate column classification, I also calculated slenderness ratio which came out to be long column. I believe since the vertical load that I calculated above is well below the critical axial load in this step, I believe the column can withstand the jib crane at full load capacity. (25% design factor = 1250lbs).
I tried researching on circular base plate calculation, but I couldn't find any. If anybody could direct me towards the design on circular base plate (min thickness, bolt distance), it would be greatly appreciated. My potential failure mode calculation would be, steel strength tension on anchor, concrete breakout strength in tension, pullout strength tension of anchor and bolt thread pullout. Any directions to solve this problem would be helpful.
Concrete is 2500PSI and 6in thick.