I started this post in another forum before I found this one. Here is the basic information on the problem, with a few changes made for updated information. I have received a number of helpful posts both here and in the other forum to set me on the right track.
I am looking at an existing three story, steel frame building in which a vibratory machine has been installed on the third floor. The machine is transmitting vibrations through the steel structure. The Owner has installed the manufacturer's recommended vibration dampers on the machine, but there is still enough vibration to be uncomfortable to the workers.
The steel frame is concrete encased for fire protection. My gut feeling is that this should help dampen the vibrations. The beam cross-section is a standard wide flanged steel beam, within a rectangular concrete fireproofing covering. I am assuming that the concrete cover ADDS to the dampening of the building.
The machine vibrates at about 650 rpm with a product weight of 350 lbs. and a machine weight of 7,500 lbs., for a total moving weight of 7,850 lbs. The machine is supported on four legs bolted to a 6" thick concrete floor slab over steel beams on a bay spacing of 20' x 30'.
We finally had a firm run the vibration tests with a nifty looking, hand-held accelerometer. We took about 15 readings on the floor slab at various locations around the machine and the plant. The information was downloaded to a PC and the data printed out in a chart for each reading location. The primary motion is vertical.
Here is one set of the readings. I estimated the major peak values from the graph I was given, frequency on the x-axis and acceleration on the y-axis:
FREQUENCY (Hz) ACCELERATION (g's)
7.5 1.30E-04
11 1.30E-02
19 1.85E-04
38 1.75E-04
42 1.35E-03
49 1.60E-03
67.5 1.00E-03
77 1.85E-04
83 1.20E-03
94 1.00E-03
97 1.10E-03
There are locations with higher acceleration values than I've shown above. All of the references I have graph amplitude rather than acceleration against frequency, where do I go from here? I will be getting recommendations from the damper manufacturer; I would just like to learn a little something in the process.