I've finished scanning the 1934 Carnegie Pocket Companion and have posted it on my website. It has the usual structural steel products manufactured by Carnegie, but also other information that may be useful to engineers working on older structures. Here are some examples:
Design of Crane-Runway Girders... as it was done in the 1930's. See page 276
Minimum Live Loads for Buildings for various cities in the USA, based on city building codes dated 1911 to 1934. See page 356.
Structural Clay Tile for floors. See page 360.
Some of the earliest Open Web Steel Joists (Gabriel, Havemeyer, Macomber, Truscon, Bates, & Kalman). See page 380.
It is at the top of this web page:
![[idea] [idea] [idea]](/data/assets/smilies/idea.gif)
![[r2d2] [r2d2] [r2d2]](/data/assets/smilies/r2d2.gif)
Design of Crane-Runway Girders... as it was done in the 1930's. See page 276
Minimum Live Loads for Buildings for various cities in the USA, based on city building codes dated 1911 to 1934. See page 356.
Structural Clay Tile for floors. See page 360.
Some of the earliest Open Web Steel Joists (Gabriel, Havemeyer, Macomber, Truscon, Bates, & Kalman). See page 380.
It is at the top of this web page:

![[idea] [idea] [idea]](/data/assets/smilies/idea.gif)
![[r2d2] [r2d2] [r2d2]](/data/assets/smilies/r2d2.gif)