Boiler106
Structural
- May 9, 2014
- 211
I have a 4'x4' built up box section pedestal standing 10' tall supporting moving equipment (robot) on top that I am evaluating, however, it is not currently in service, nor has it been.
The walls are made of 1/4 inch plate which obviously qualify as slender elements per AISC Chapter B. The top of the column/box section sees downward axial force, horiz shear, overturning moment and torsion in one loading condition.
Being a building structural engineer, the slenderness makes me uneasy. I have checked by hand the combination of forces using AISC 360-10 and it appears to work, however, I am unsatisfied that i can use such a slender element without stiffening. I am limited to RAM elements for analysis.
Ignoring vibration and fatigue, are there code limitations on width-to-thickness slenderness for axial/shear/flexure of these elements that i am missing? Can anyone provide guidance on stiffening?
The walls are made of 1/4 inch plate which obviously qualify as slender elements per AISC Chapter B. The top of the column/box section sees downward axial force, horiz shear, overturning moment and torsion in one loading condition.
Being a building structural engineer, the slenderness makes me uneasy. I have checked by hand the combination of forces using AISC 360-10 and it appears to work, however, I am unsatisfied that i can use such a slender element without stiffening. I am limited to RAM elements for analysis.
Ignoring vibration and fatigue, are there code limitations on width-to-thickness slenderness for axial/shear/flexure of these elements that i am missing? Can anyone provide guidance on stiffening?