Remember the "supplier" here is likely not the manufacturer. (which is a well known Swedish company who has an excellent reputation). I see these sieves regularly across a broad number of industries.
nivoo_boss: "the supplier wants the openings between the steel beams cast in concrete under this thing"
Reinforces the above. Sounds like the 'supplier' in this case isn't that manufacturer. It would be abnormal for this equipment manufacturer to be involved in designating the required floor openings.
ThomasH said:
Isn't there a risk for resonance during start-up and stop of the machine? How often does that happen?
I would run an analysis for several frequencies up to 32 Hz and and check how the system responds.
Yes there is a risk but the consequences are unlikely to be problematic. I'd be focussed on the behaviour under steady state because that is where the machine spends 99.9% of the time. Regarding the start-stop patterns. That really depends on how they are used but having them running 24/7 is certainly quite common.
ThomasH said:
I would run an analysis for several frequencies up to 32 Hz and and check how the system responds.
I've never seen the equipment not vibrate at the specified frequency except during start up and slow down where it operates at lower frequencies for around 5-20s. The motor would get up to speed in 1 or 2 seconds. The sieve takes a little longer to reach steady state.
dgeesaman said:
This is a red flag to me. I'm not a building structural designer... There needs to be a crisp agreement between the machinery supplier and the mounting structure supplier. We require deflection limits for our machinery mounting surfaces
This isn't exactly a delicate piece of manufacturing machinery. In fact, quite the opposite. The mounting surfaces and deflection limits of the structure are not really relevant to the sieve, it will quite happily vibrate and deflect because that is what it is DESIGNED to do.
The problem is if it induces excessive resonance in the structure.
(As per my last thread, I've seen situations that are so bad it shakes the entire structure a 30mx30mx30x facility and could felt over 50m away through the earth.) Though in most installations I've seen or implemented myself there is some hard to avoid local floor vibration, but it doesn't extend beyond that.
dgeesaman said:
If nobody can speak to the actual loads
The loads are listed in the first post and in the image posted two days ago. The function is sinusoidal, though the horizontal and vertical aren't in the same phase.