Kstructuralguy
Structural
- Mar 6, 2018
- 6
I'm designing a cable for a fabric screen wall on the edge of a roof penthouse (and its connections to a steel post and CMU wall). Since there is very little dead load, I'm not concerned with vertical deflection. I'm designing it primarily for the horizontal wind force.
The issue I'm having is that in order to calculate the tension in the cable, I need to know the sag of the cable. To know the sag, I need to know the elongation of the cable. And to know the elongation, I need to know... The tension. So somewhere I need to specify one of these things (sag or tension) or make an assumption and solve in iterations and hope to converge on a solution.
The horizontal cable reaction is qL^2/(8h) where q = uniform load, L = span, and h = sag. So lower sag means requires much higher tension. When putting the screen wall up, they are going to pull the cables tight so there is little sag under the light dead load. I can design for this tension force and calculate the sag. But does this mean under the (much higher) wind loads the cable will 'sag' laterally much more without an increase in the cable tension? Or would tension AND sag increase? When I use the sag induced by dead load only for the lateral wind load case the calculated tension force is incredibly and unrealistically high. I have a higher tolerance for lateral deflection than vertical but at the same time I don't want to sag significantly under the dead load only case.
The issue I'm having is that in order to calculate the tension in the cable, I need to know the sag of the cable. To know the sag, I need to know the elongation of the cable. And to know the elongation, I need to know... The tension. So somewhere I need to specify one of these things (sag or tension) or make an assumption and solve in iterations and hope to converge on a solution.
The horizontal cable reaction is qL^2/(8h) where q = uniform load, L = span, and h = sag. So lower sag means requires much higher tension. When putting the screen wall up, they are going to pull the cables tight so there is little sag under the light dead load. I can design for this tension force and calculate the sag. But does this mean under the (much higher) wind loads the cable will 'sag' laterally much more without an increase in the cable tension? Or would tension AND sag increase? When I use the sag induced by dead load only for the lateral wind load case the calculated tension force is incredibly and unrealistically high. I have a higher tolerance for lateral deflection than vertical but at the same time I don't want to sag significantly under the dead load only case.