phinn
Mechanical
- May 28, 2015
- 2
Hello,
our structural engineer asked me a question on the piping restraint loads he received from the pipe stress analysis, I am not 100% sure on the topic so I hope someone has encountered the same question:
The pipe restraints (in Caesar as well as Rohr2) are usually placed on the pipe centerline, and therefore the results at these restraints reflect the loads at the pipe centerline. Now my colleage who is engineering the steel structure says he needs the loads at the bottom of the the pipe shoe (interface between steel structure and shoe).
At first thought it made sense to me, but I would have to add rigid elements to each and every pipe restraint in the hight of the pipe shoe to achieve this. I guess he wants to know the moments that are caused by the force x shoe hight..
What do you guys say to this? Have any of you encountered this question?
our structural engineer asked me a question on the piping restraint loads he received from the pipe stress analysis, I am not 100% sure on the topic so I hope someone has encountered the same question:
The pipe restraints (in Caesar as well as Rohr2) are usually placed on the pipe centerline, and therefore the results at these restraints reflect the loads at the pipe centerline. Now my colleage who is engineering the steel structure says he needs the loads at the bottom of the the pipe shoe (interface between steel structure and shoe).
At first thought it made sense to me, but I would have to add rigid elements to each and every pipe restraint in the hight of the pipe shoe to achieve this. I guess he wants to know the moments that are caused by the force x shoe hight..
What do you guys say to this? Have any of you encountered this question?