Ahmadfahmik:
Don’t simplify things so drastically, you don’t do any of the rest of us any favors, you just leave us wondering, if you know what you are doing or not. If you have real drawings show them as pdf attachments, that info. is important to an experienced engineer trying to help answer your questions. Otherwise we just keep playing 20 questions, and never get to the important stuff. So, answer my/our questions because many of our answers might likely be different with different framing schemes, dimensions or different load magnitudes, positions, etc. And, read the meaningful posts twice for their full meaning, don’t just skim them and avoid the questions. Yes your trailer is basically a beam, but it is much more complicated than that simple statement. The details, the interaction btwn. various members, and good quality fabrication are every bit as important as checking the center sill design. You have to select your rear running gear, wheels, axles, suspension, etc. and design around that. You will have clearance issues over/around this rear running gear and the tractor area in the front. What size are your steel coils, how many on the trailer, what weight each, etc? Steel coils actually transport more securely when standing on their side in a saddle on the trailer or railcar. Try me at rwhaiatcomcastdotnet, no spaces in that string. Is this trailer for highway transport or just in-plant service? You should look for the design codes which govern this type of equipment in your area. States, national governments and manufacturing associations are a good place to start looking for codes and standards. Look at existing trailers to gain some understanding of what’s normally done and why. These flexible trailers are usually cambered (not pre-stressed), you build the camber in during fabrication. This is primarily for clearance reasons, but also because customers get really nervous if there is too much deflection under load. It looks over loaded, dangerous, over stressed. The camber always causes comment too, it looks funny, but its on an empty trailer so why worry..., the public thinks. Some loads are stiffer than these trailers, but not so with your steel coils or a flat stack of steel plate. Get your textbooks out, it sounds like you have a lot to learn. And, you should still be talking with your boss on this design, not just to people on the internet.