penpe
Structural
- Nov 27, 2012
- 68
We have designed a cable tray bridge that spans about 56 feet. Based on design loads joists required are (2) 30K11 - about 7 feet apart. For support of cable trays C6's span between the joists - at about 4 foot spacing. Our drawings direct the fabricator to place the C6's at the joist panel points, but they didn't do that. The C6's are spaced at about 3'-10" while panel points are 4'-0" apart. My first concern is bending stresses in the bottom chord where a C6 ends up halfway between panel points. The actual section modulus is unknown but some sources suggest it would be (2)-L2x2x3/16. (We're working on getting hard data about section properties). Double angle properties listed in AISC9 provide S and I. Using cable tray design loads the bottom chord is not over-stressed by a long shot, and deflections are less than L/500.
What else should I check? I know that concentrated loads should be placed at panel points, but with (14) C6's spanning between the two joists it would seem that the load is fairly well distributed.
We'd probably have the fabricator remove/replace the C6's to coincide with panel points, but would result in unacceptable delay. But if delaying prevents structural failure it's worthwhile, of course!
What else should I check? I know that concentrated loads should be placed at panel points, but with (14) C6's spanning between the two joists it would seem that the load is fairly well distributed.
We'd probably have the fabricator remove/replace the C6's to coincide with panel points, but would result in unacceptable delay. But if delaying prevents structural failure it's worthwhile, of course!