Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span

   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span #141  
Other folks have mentioned quite a few rather important details involved in bridge beam design. The tables you see may only be applicable to a complete component design of the company issuing them. Any deviation from that design negates their use.

Look at concrete beams. Gives a very good description of the compressive and tension areas of a beam. Those compressive areas could be considered a column. The beam web may also be subjected to buckling.
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span #142  
Euler formula is a method of calculating the torsional buckling of beam column.
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span
  • Thread Starter
#143  
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span
  • Thread Starter
#144  
The tables you see may only be applicable to a complete component design of the company issuing them. Any deviation from that design negates their use.

Maybe?

But the tables from harrington and CM, apply to MY situation. Using "their" end trucks or "mine" dont change the span, dont change how the beam attaches to the truck, and dont magically change the properties of the steel. Therefore, if a W18x60 bean is good to span 40' and carry 2k sitting on their trucks and columns, its good enough for me.
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span #145  
Lateral torsional buckling is a type of Euler Buckling, at least in the terms we use. The top flange of a beam is in compression, so buckling is usually the controlling design requirement when the span exceeds the depth of the member, in feet. In other words, if the span is 12', it can control for beams under 12" deep.

This is a very serious consideration. Most beam tables are based on a continously braced top flange. You need to be careful to do the proper conversion for unbraced length. Most structural failures are casued by insufficient connection design, second on the list is buckling.
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span
  • Thread Starter
#146  
Most beam tables are based on a continously braced top flange. You need to be careful to do the proper conversion for unbraced length.

I really wish I knew why everyone keeps repeating this.

Please show me in any of the following tables, where it says its based on a braced top flange?

http://www.harringtonhoists.com/tech_support/edocs/EDOC 0367 rev02.pdf
Adjustable Height Steel Gantry Cranes, Gantry, Gantry Crane
http://www.gaffey.com/descriptions/productspecs/BridgeKit_Man.pdf
http://www.washingtoncrane.com/PDFs/Spanco_gantry_cranes_brochure_2015.pdf
http://www.onecranesource.com/pdf/hoists/crane-bridge-thru.pdf
http://store.americancrane.com/Asset/Crane-Comp-Drawings-and-Spec-CSL-1002-0407-opt.pdf

Sure, some of them have a "*" or specify "w/ CX x XX channel cap. But alot do not. The ones that do not.....WHY do you keep saying they assume it is braced when it IS NOT.


Harrington says I can span 40' with a single unbraced w18x60 and lift 2-ton
Washington crane calls for a W18x55 for a 35' span good to 2-ton unbraced
Goodwin also calls for w18x55 for 35' and 2-ton
CM calls out a w14x53 for 36' and 2-ton
Cranesource calls for a W14x61 being good for both 36' and 38' with 2-ton

So you care to tell me why I cannot rate my W18x60 spanning 37' good for at least 2-ton and not have to worry about buckling?
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span
  • Thread Starter
#147  
Most beam tables are based on a continously braced top flange. You need to be careful to do the proper conversion for unbraced length.

I really wish I knew why everyone keeps repeating this.

Please show me in any of the following tables, where it says its based on a braced top flange?

http://www.harringtonhoists.com/tech_support/edocs/EDOC 0367 rev02.pdf
Adjustable Height Steel Gantry Cranes, Gantry, Gantry Crane
http://www.gaffey.com/descriptions/productspecs/BridgeKit_Man.pdf
http://www.washingtoncrane.com/PDFs/Spanco_gantry_cranes_brochure_2015.pdf
http://www.onecranesource.com/pdf/hoists/crane-bridge-thru.pdf
http://store.americancrane.com/Asset/Crane-Comp-Drawings-and-Spec-CSL-1002-0407-opt.pdf

Sure, some of them have a "*" or specify "w/ CX x XX channel cap. But alot do not. The ones that do not.....WHY do you keep saying they assume it is braced when it IS NOT.


Harrington says I can span 40' with a single unbraced w18x60 and lift 2-ton
Washington crane calls for a W18x55 for a 35' span good to 2-ton unbraced
Goodwin also calls for w18x55 for 35' and 2-ton
CM calls out a w14x53 for 36' and 2-ton
Cranesource calls for a W14x61 being good for both 36' and 38' with 2-ton

So you care to tell me why I cannot rate my W18x60 spanning 37' good for at least 2-ton and not have to worry about buckling?
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span #148  
You're going to have to get a roof rack for your car to carry a beam that long :laughing:
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span #149  
I really wish I knew why everyone keeps repeating this.

Please show me in any of the following tables, where it says its based on a braced top flange?

http://www.harringtonhoists.com/tech_support/edocs/EDOC 0367 rev02.pdf
Adjustable Height Steel Gantry Cranes, Gantry, Gantry Crane
http://www.gaffey.com/descriptions/productspecs/BridgeKit_Man.pdf
http://www.washingtoncrane.com/PDFs/Spanco_gantry_cranes_brochure_2015.pdf
http://www.onecranesource.com/pdf/hoists/crane-bridge-thru.pdf
http://store.americancrane.com/Asset/Crane-Comp-Drawings-and-Spec-CSL-1002-0407-opt.pdf

Sure, some of them have a "*" or specify "w/ CX x XX channel cap. But alot do not. The ones that do not.....WHY do you keep saying they assume it is braced when it IS NOT.


Harrington says I can span 40' with a single unbraced w18x60 and lift 2-ton
Washington crane calls for a W18x55 for a 35' span good to 2-ton unbraced
Goodwin also calls for w18x55 for 35' and 2-ton
CM calls out a w14x53 for 36' and 2-ton
Cranesource calls for a W14x61 being good for both 36' and 38' with 2-ton

So you care to tell me why I cannot rate my W18x60 spanning 37' good for at least 2-ton and not have to worry about buckling?

LD
You seem to be pulling ratings from different tables. At times you list stress and other times you give a beam size for a specific span. The stress from beam tables assumes a restrained flange and does not account for dynamic loading . If you use the beam stress you can have failure from loading not checked
The crane tables will be checked for various failure methods and will produce acceptable results
 
   / Bridge Crane designs and ideas...38' span
  • Thread Starter
#150  
LD
You seem to be pulling ratings from different tables. At times you list stress and other times you give a beam size for a specific span. The stress from beam tables assumes a restrained flange and does not account for dynamic loading . If you use the beam stress you can have failure from loading not checked
The crane tables will be checked for various failure methods and will produce acceptable results

Have no idea what tables you guys keep referring to? the ONLY tables I have ever referenced are the ones specific to bridge crane design, which are unrestrained UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED.

Any other calculation for stress, deflection, etc has NOT been from a table. They were calculated from the formulas.

We can debate all you want, but its a moot point. I have a W18x60 beam. (well actually a 25' and 12' beam that are being welded together). It is going up and will lift whatever I need. I will have no hesitation at all if I need to lift 5k
 

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