colinmseries
Mechanical
- Nov 15, 2006
- 44
Hi. Not sure if this should be in the structural section or here, so please refer me if it should.
I'm wanting to build a mobile frame to support two small cars, something I can push around a workshop. They weigh about 1000kg each and the hope is to place one above the other on a frame mounted on castors. The new workshop where they will live has been designed around this idea and so one way or another I have to make it work. Plan A is to use the sort of framing and cross beams used in warehouses, because used they can be bought cheaply and are rated to carry far in excess of the cars' total weight. When assembled the frame would look fairly box like at about 60"longx70"widex50"high, basically two side frames with two pairs of cross beams. If it were to stand on the floor I'd be happy it's being used as designed albeit unconventionally and get on with it. However, it's the castors that worry me and I'm struggling to find a source of help. I can see the bottom of each frame leg (4no.) will have a bending load from the castor trying to roll away and I'm at a loss to quantify this. Obviously the frame legs have bolted plates and normally they sit flat on the floor. I know enough to know better than to just press on. Can you help suggest where I go next please?
Any thoughts radical or otherwise appreciated, Colin.
I'm wanting to build a mobile frame to support two small cars, something I can push around a workshop. They weigh about 1000kg each and the hope is to place one above the other on a frame mounted on castors. The new workshop where they will live has been designed around this idea and so one way or another I have to make it work. Plan A is to use the sort of framing and cross beams used in warehouses, because used they can be bought cheaply and are rated to carry far in excess of the cars' total weight. When assembled the frame would look fairly box like at about 60"longx70"widex50"high, basically two side frames with two pairs of cross beams. If it were to stand on the floor I'd be happy it's being used as designed albeit unconventionally and get on with it. However, it's the castors that worry me and I'm struggling to find a source of help. I can see the bottom of each frame leg (4no.) will have a bending load from the castor trying to roll away and I'm at a loss to quantify this. Obviously the frame legs have bolted plates and normally they sit flat on the floor. I know enough to know better than to just press on. Can you help suggest where I go next please?
Any thoughts radical or otherwise appreciated, Colin.