jay156
Structural
- Apr 9, 2009
- 104
I'm analyzing some warehouse storage racks for a client to give them a load capacity. The problem is, my results keep showing that the capacity is far far FAR below what the rack company says they should be and far below what the client is putting on the shelves already. The rack manufacturer says they should support like 50,000 lbs per shelf, hell I can't barely show them to support 500 lbs per shelf without the columns being overstressed.
This has happened to me every time I try to load rate storage shelves. Are the manufacturers' engineers using some kind of obscure provisions of the code to make their capacities higher, or am I just overlooking something or making a stupid mistake? (I've got the unbraced column lengths set to the distance between the shelves. I even set the K value to 0.5, which I'm not sure is really right anyway.)
This has happened to me every time I try to load rate storage shelves. Are the manufacturers' engineers using some kind of obscure provisions of the code to make their capacities higher, or am I just overlooking something or making a stupid mistake? (I've got the unbraced column lengths set to the distance between the shelves. I even set the K value to 0.5, which I'm not sure is really right anyway.)