cjme
Mechanical
- Jun 11, 2006
- 5
Hey everyone,
I'm trying to design a lifting beam that is going to lift 2 objects side by side. The smaller object is about 8 feet long & weighs 2200 lbs, and the larger object is about 22 feet long & weighs 36000 lbs. We are using a single lifting point over the center of gravity, and are trying to use something that looks similar to a modified "J" shape
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!-!
!-!
That's my attempt at a diagram, I know it's hard to follow. The long object has 2 I-beams running down the length, the small object has 1 beam running the length, and then there are 2 beams connecting the two together. The beams have big J-hooks on each side of them, which they'll slip cable slings over to pick up the objects.
I know my attempt at the explanation kind of sucks, but can someone help me with the calculations & analysis so I can see if what I've done will be strong enough? I tried running some FEA but it killed my computer, and I'm only 5 months out of school so I'm used to neat textbook solutions, not these crazy real world problems. Thanks.
I'm trying to design a lifting beam that is going to lift 2 objects side by side. The smaller object is about 8 feet long & weighs 2200 lbs, and the larger object is about 22 feet long & weighs 36000 lbs. We are using a single lifting point over the center of gravity, and are trying to use something that looks similar to a modified "J" shape
!
!-!
!-!
That's my attempt at a diagram, I know it's hard to follow. The long object has 2 I-beams running down the length, the small object has 1 beam running the length, and then there are 2 beams connecting the two together. The beams have big J-hooks on each side of them, which they'll slip cable slings over to pick up the objects.
I know my attempt at the explanation kind of sucks, but can someone help me with the calculations & analysis so I can see if what I've done will be strong enough? I tried running some FEA but it killed my computer, and I'm only 5 months out of school so I'm used to neat textbook solutions, not these crazy real world problems. Thanks.