inwo
Electrical
- May 23, 2007
- 10
First off I'm not sure if this is the right forum, and second I'm not expecting anyone to sign off on safety or design a bridge for me.
My brother is building a foot bridge for his golf course.
It looked very unstable to me and a search shows no design like this.
I believe he may allow cart traffic on bridge, which means this could be an extreme safety issue.
2' in 60' seems a problem.
I just want to know if my calculation is in the ballpark.
60' span, using 2 light duty mobile-home, I-beams, with the webs heated and arched 2'.
I think you can see where this is going!
Support is from two 3/8" wire ropes crossed in middle, end to end.
No buttress footings are allowed. Cables ties must support the load from the arch.
Google shows 3/8" ` 12,000 lb break and 2500 safe load. (dead load?)
This means the two cables will be stressed to safe 5,000 lb safe load with only 675 lb weight of structure and load. This means present design is barely self supporting.
Breaking @ 3200 lb load in middle.
This may be going up in the next few days. If no answer, I'm going to suggest measurement of cable tension under fixed load to check my math.
My brother is building a foot bridge for his golf course.
It looked very unstable to me and a search shows no design like this.
I believe he may allow cart traffic on bridge, which means this could be an extreme safety issue.
2' in 60' seems a problem.
I just want to know if my calculation is in the ballpark.
60' span, using 2 light duty mobile-home, I-beams, with the webs heated and arched 2'.
I think you can see where this is going!
Support is from two 3/8" wire ropes crossed in middle, end to end.
No buttress footings are allowed. Cables ties must support the load from the arch.
Google shows 3/8" ` 12,000 lb break and 2500 safe load. (dead load?)
This means the two cables will be stressed to safe 5,000 lb safe load with only 675 lb weight of structure and load. This means present design is barely self supporting.
Breaking @ 3200 lb load in middle.
This may be going up in the next few days. If no answer, I'm going to suggest measurement of cable tension under fixed load to check my math.