JStephen
Mechanical
- Aug 25, 2004
- 8,696
I'm designing a lifting lug.
The specification calls for a safety factor of 2 and an impact factor of 2.
So fair enough, if I have a 10,000 lb item, I add the impact factor and design for a load of 20,000 lbs, with a safety factor of 2. Or, I need design strength of 40,000 lbs.
Then I'm designing this lifting lug to be lifted by a screw-pin shackle.
The shackle would normally be good for a rated load, but includes a factor of safety of 5 already.
So do I use a shackle rated for 10,000 lbs or one rated for 20,000 lbs?
It seems off to specify a design load and then use a shackle not rated for that specified load.
But then it seems overkill to require the shackle to have a strength ten times what the load weighs, which is what happens with the 20,000 lb shackle.
And surely if the item is just shipped out, the crane operator's not going to look at it and say "I'd best double the weight of this for an impact factor".
Any thoughts?
The specification calls for a safety factor of 2 and an impact factor of 2.
So fair enough, if I have a 10,000 lb item, I add the impact factor and design for a load of 20,000 lbs, with a safety factor of 2. Or, I need design strength of 40,000 lbs.
Then I'm designing this lifting lug to be lifted by a screw-pin shackle.
The shackle would normally be good for a rated load, but includes a factor of safety of 5 already.
So do I use a shackle rated for 10,000 lbs or one rated for 20,000 lbs?
It seems off to specify a design load and then use a shackle not rated for that specified load.
But then it seems overkill to require the shackle to have a strength ten times what the load weighs, which is what happens with the 20,000 lb shackle.
And surely if the item is just shipped out, the crane operator's not going to look at it and say "I'd best double the weight of this for an impact factor".
Any thoughts?