BenJohnson
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 12, 2012
- 52
I am a newbie here. Long time registered civil engineer in California. Retired now in Indonesia. I am building a house here - a place with no building codes or even the little information available is in a foreign language.
All the wood here is different that good 'ole Douglas fir. Nothing is graded at the lumber yard. I am working with wood like Teak and Mahogany, not for furniture, but for for structural members (joists, truss, etc). The problem is I go to the few web sites that give some properties for wood, and I typically get this:
metric imperial (my conversion)
Crushing strength *: 56 MPa 8,100 PSI
Static bending strength *: 98 MPa 12,900 PSI
Modulus of elasticity *: 13,740 MPa 13,015,700 PSI
I had to do the conversion (shown above) from Mega-pascal to PSI units using the regular metric to imperial conversion calculators. [link ]OnlineConversion.com[/url] is my favorite.
Now anybody who has worked with bending stress (Fb) before knows these values are about 10 times too high. Here is the typical values for Northern Red Oak:
Max Fiber Stress 1,600 PSI
Modulus of Elasticity 1.3 Million PSI
Max Shear 205 PSI
These numbers should look familiar to anyone who has gone into the joists and rafter tables to find allowable span.
So my question is, "What am I doing wrong?" All of the woods available in this area show these extremely high strengths - even coconut wood. I don't believe they are 10x as strong as Red Oak. My only guess is the published values for North American wood use a 10 times factor of safety above the laboratory test results. That is hard to believe too. Any ideas?
All the wood here is different that good 'ole Douglas fir. Nothing is graded at the lumber yard. I am working with wood like Teak and Mahogany, not for furniture, but for for structural members (joists, truss, etc). The problem is I go to the few web sites that give some properties for wood, and I typically get this:
metric imperial (my conversion)
Crushing strength *: 56 MPa 8,100 PSI
Static bending strength *: 98 MPa 12,900 PSI
Modulus of elasticity *: 13,740 MPa 13,015,700 PSI
I had to do the conversion (shown above) from Mega-pascal to PSI units using the regular metric to imperial conversion calculators. [link ]OnlineConversion.com[/url] is my favorite.
Now anybody who has worked with bending stress (Fb) before knows these values are about 10 times too high. Here is the typical values for Northern Red Oak:
Max Fiber Stress 1,600 PSI
Modulus of Elasticity 1.3 Million PSI
Max Shear 205 PSI
These numbers should look familiar to anyone who has gone into the joists and rafter tables to find allowable span.
So my question is, "What am I doing wrong?" All of the woods available in this area show these extremely high strengths - even coconut wood. I don't believe they are 10x as strong as Red Oak. My only guess is the published values for North American wood use a 10 times factor of safety above the laboratory test results. That is hard to believe too. Any ideas?