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help for project looking into the amount of load's beams can take |
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| Apr6-08, 06:25 PM | #1 |
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help for project looking into the amount of load's beams can take
Hi guys I was wondering if you could help me out with designing a project. I am looking into how much load different beams can take. How should I weigh down the beam? Should I put load on top of it or hang it from the bottom, or something else? If on top, should I just load it all directly on top of the center of mass or should I evenly distribute it about the beam?
Also after I measure how much load it could take, is that when I would use the Euler-Bernolli beam equation to interpret results? |
| Apr6-08, 06:39 PM | #2 |
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Do you have a copy of Machinery's Handbook?
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| Apr6-08, 06:41 PM | #3 |
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no I don't
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| Apr6-08, 06:42 PM | #4 |
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help for project looking into the amount of load's beams can take
oh and does anyone know any sites that provide some info on structural beams? Like the common shapes used, and why they are commonly made out of steel, diagrams of them, etc.? anything would be appreciated
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| Apr6-08, 07:03 PM | #5 |
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This has about everything you might want. The challenge is sorting out the small amount relevant to you.
http://www.aisc.org/Content/Navigati...ePubs_Home.htm |
| Apr6-08, 07:04 PM | #6 |
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Ok I really need a lot more help with this than I initially thought. I have been trying some internet searches but am not having much luck. If someone can basically give me a link that will tell me everything I need to know about beams, and how to measure things for them that would be great.
Or if you don't mind, give me some terms I should look up. Like, stress, load, etc. and I will try to build my searches off of that. Thanks for any help, I really need some |
| Apr6-08, 07:07 PM | #7 |
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And here's one with a little less information
http://www.engineersedge.com/structu...pes_menu.shtml But, what's your background, education, and project. That might help tailor recommendations. |
| Apr6-08, 07:13 PM | #8 |
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Wow thanks I will get to reading those.
Well, I am a high school Junior, and I am in an advanced program (above AP level) and we have to do a big research project for my senior year and we are putting together our proposals now. I am doing a project on how different shapes and materials of beams affect how much load they can take. I am very good with math and physics, but I do not know much about beams so I need to learn a lot about them for this project and I really just needed help getting started. |
| Apr6-08, 07:32 PM | #9 |
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OK, that's a pretty tall order, but you could limit it somewhat by, for example, looking at a beam supported at both ends, with a uniform cross-section, either a uniformly distributed load or the same load right in the center, maybe 3 different shapes in steel, 1 in aluminum, and 1 in wood (just for gasps!). That should take you maybe 40 or 50 hours. What's your time frame on this? Do you have any standard resources (Mark's Handbook, a Statics and Strengths textbook, or anything else). And, do you have a decent computer if I can get you a beam calculation program?
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| Apr6-08, 07:45 PM | #10 |
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Well the project is supposed to be a big project, it is supposed to span across my whole senior year, I might look into that beam calculation program. But I can't really try steel and I don't know about aluminum. The problem is, I am just a high school student. I don't have the materials to test on a steel beam, first it would be hard to manipulate into shapes that I want, second it would take lots of weight to break. I was looking into using wood and maybe cardboard. I don't have any handbooks or anything either.
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| Apr6-08, 09:38 PM | #11 |
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Cardboard won't be much good. Definitely use wood in your case, because I'm sure there are numbers out there for calculations about its strength if you need to do that. It's easy to work with too (I'm assuming you have some wood shop experience and have access to equipment).
As for the setup, you probably want to support the beam on both ends, raised maybe a foot in the air. This way, things won't have too much of a wall when the beam breaks. Each end should be clamped down so its fixed. The way you load it can be a variable if you want to. |
| Apr7-08, 04:58 AM | #12 |
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I misunderstood your post. I didn't realize you wanted to test the beams. But, if you have a budget of, say, $100, you can buy (and bend) some steel and aluminum shapes. Otherwise, you're probably stuck with wood.
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| Apr7-08, 07:51 AM | #13 |
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Well my variable is going to be the shapes of the beams, I am going to see how changing the shape affects the load. So I can't have the way I load it be a variable, thats what the shape needs to be. I wouldn't be able to get my own steel shapes, and I don't know how I would get different aluminum shapes. Any suggestions on that?
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| Apr7-08, 08:11 AM | #14 |
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Recognitions:
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Is there really a reason to do the testing? This subject is pretty well covered analytically.
If you can get aluminum shapes, you can get steel shapes. The nice thing about the aluminum shapes will be the lower loads you'll have to apply and thus a less extensive set up. Go to any on line metal supplier and look at their assortments of structural shapes. 99% of the suppliers will have various shapes of box tubing, I-beams and angle irons if you so choose. |
| Apr7-08, 08:21 AM | #15 |
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If you really want to use shape as the variable, you're probably stuck with wood. You'll want to make sure you use really, really good joining techniques and a consistent wood. The mechanical properties of wood are (at best) loosely defined.
Here's a fair starting point to look at engineered wood. http://www.awc.org/index.html |
| Apr13-08, 11:57 AM | #16 |
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Chris |
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