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Mu of a Beam |
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| Sep25-12, 06:23 AM | #1 |
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Mu of a Beam
http://www.personal.psu.edu/kar5230/...ete%20Beam.pdf
I'm stuck with a formula above. It says that to calculate for Moment of a beam... use the formula Mu= w L^2 / 8 now given w = 1000 lb/ft, L=20 feet... then Mu= w L^2/8 = 1000(20)^2/8 = 50,000 lb-ft (although it's written as 500,000 lb-ft in the site.. i think it's wrong?) Anyway. my question is.. i have spent half a day doing conversion from lb-ft to Kilonewton-meter and I can't seem to get it right. I found out the following formula for converting between the two units: 1 kN - m = 737.56 ft-lb 1 kN/m = 68.52 lb/ft Now in the above example given w = 1000 lb/ft, L=20 feet 1000 lb/ft = (14.59 kn/m x 6^2) / 2 = 525 kn-m/8 = 65.65 Kn-m Now converting Kn-m to ft-lb... 65.65 KN-m x 737.56 ft-lbs / 1 KN-m = 48424 ft-lb or (lb-ft I assume this is the same). Now why can't it be equal to the 50,000 lb-ft in earlier calculation?? |
| Sep25-12, 06:49 AM | #2 |
Recognitions:
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20 feet = 6.096 meters, not 6.
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| Sep25-12, 07:31 AM | #3 |
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| Sep28-12, 09:27 PM | #4 |
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Mu of a Beam
I'm trying to determine the deflection of the above beam. An engineer told me that deflections of beams from 6 meter to 7 meter is non-linear and high that is why many in constructions limit beam span to 6 meters for economy. What do you think of this. Anyway. Let's prove it by formula/calculations. On the following page is online calculator to solve for deflection.
http://civilengineer.webinfolist.com/str/sdcalcuf.php Supposed span of beam is 6 meters, w of beam is 4.23 Kn/m, distance of deflection measured is at middle, Modulus of Elasticity is 57000x sqrt (fc=21) or 261206, what is the formula or how do you determine the Moment of Inertia so I can input it to the online calculator above, thanks? |
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