TimSchrader2
Mechanical
- Feb 15, 2018
- 119
Hello.
By the Alum Design Manual the allowable bend stress is (1.17x yield)/Ny= 1.17x35)/1.65=24.8KSI. Ref eqaution 6-2 and table 6-3. There are other equations but this governs bending.
For Stainless Steel 304L by the ASCE by ASD (Allowable stress Design) the allowable stress is:
Stainless Ult/yield= 80ksi/30ksi (away from welds) for easy to weld 304L is= yield/1.85 (per table 1). Or 30/1.85=16.2ksi.
So Alum allowable is 34.5% more then stainless. (24.8-16.2)/16.2. In situations where a catastophic falure would be worse then some local yielding, stainless would be safer by a factor of 80ksi/42ksi=1.9 times. and so would prevent injury or even death by that factor.
Part of the reason is that the ASCE in section 4 says you can use the 'nominal strength specified in design provisions' and most tables list min values or 'typical'. Typical should be the same as nominal.
The other reason is it is based on yield not ult. Another reason is the 1.85 factor compared to the 1.65 from two different code standards.
There is another body or code that lists allowable bend stresses for stainless. Does anybody have that value. I would have to dig thru my files to recall the name of that body or code.
The ASME below shows a fcator of 1.46 Yield/allow=205/138Mpa. But i believe that is geared towards boilers not structural design.
By the Alum Design Manual the allowable bend stress is (1.17x yield)/Ny= 1.17x35)/1.65=24.8KSI. Ref eqaution 6-2 and table 6-3. There are other equations but this governs bending.
For Stainless Steel 304L by the ASCE by ASD (Allowable stress Design) the allowable stress is:
Stainless Ult/yield= 80ksi/30ksi (away from welds) for easy to weld 304L is= yield/1.85 (per table 1). Or 30/1.85=16.2ksi.
So Alum allowable is 34.5% more then stainless. (24.8-16.2)/16.2. In situations where a catastophic falure would be worse then some local yielding, stainless would be safer by a factor of 80ksi/42ksi=1.9 times. and so would prevent injury or even death by that factor.
Part of the reason is that the ASCE in section 4 says you can use the 'nominal strength specified in design provisions' and most tables list min values or 'typical'. Typical should be the same as nominal.
The other reason is it is based on yield not ult. Another reason is the 1.85 factor compared to the 1.65 from two different code standards.
There is another body or code that lists allowable bend stresses for stainless. Does anybody have that value. I would have to dig thru my files to recall the name of that body or code.
The ASME below shows a fcator of 1.46 Yield/allow=205/138Mpa. But i believe that is geared towards boilers not structural design.