sign33
Electrical
- Dec 7, 2019
- 2
Hi Engineers,
My son is doing an Eagle Scout project for a non-profit organization that hosts university students that do testing in the Mojave Desert (deep in the middle of nowhere). His project includes mounting a small stop light, solar panel, and small utility box on a single pole outdoors. He has spec'd a 3" galvanized steel pole to be 12 feet high and plans to put 4' into the ground (16' total length) set in a 10" diameter hole with concrete. The light will be mounted at about 7' high and is 17" x 8.5", the box mounted at 10' high is 10"x18", and the solar panel mounted on top is 20" x 21" and mounted at a 45 degree angle. This is private property and the group leaders have said there are no local or state regulations that apply, but everything in the desert needs to withstand a 120mph wind load. After an exhaustive search of the internet, he has determined that the only way to figure out wind load is the "ask an engineer". The questions he wants to verify would be 1) is 4' of concrete footing enough and 2) is 3" galvanized steel pipe (schedule 40) strong enough for a 120mph wind load.
Any suggestions on who could help a scout verify his calculations?
Thanks,
Mike