aswierski
Structural
- Apr 3, 2009
- 68
First, some background info...
Our client's standards state that vertical fixed ladder supports shall not exceed ten feet. Upon inspection of already-installed ladders on this particular site (designed by other firms), we noticed that many of the actual support spans exceed ten feet (approx. 12'-20' spans). I have been asked by the client to analyze the ladders to see what our maximum allowable spacing really is.
Now, the part I'm confused with is the selection of a reasonable K-factor for the weak axis slenderness. I know that the base is fixed and the top is pinned per my FBD on sheet 2 of the attached pdf, giving me a K value of 0.8. That makes perfect sense to me for the strong axis, but along the y-axis (same axis as rungs) I'm not sure what to use. In my attached calcs I used 0.8 for K for both directions, but I think this may be over-conservative as the rungs are essentially acting as braces in the y direction. What are your thoughts?
Our client's standards state that vertical fixed ladder supports shall not exceed ten feet. Upon inspection of already-installed ladders on this particular site (designed by other firms), we noticed that many of the actual support spans exceed ten feet (approx. 12'-20' spans). I have been asked by the client to analyze the ladders to see what our maximum allowable spacing really is.
Now, the part I'm confused with is the selection of a reasonable K-factor for the weak axis slenderness. I know that the base is fixed and the top is pinned per my FBD on sheet 2 of the attached pdf, giving me a K value of 0.8. That makes perfect sense to me for the strong axis, but along the y-axis (same axis as rungs) I'm not sure what to use. In my attached calcs I used 0.8 for K for both directions, but I think this may be over-conservative as the rungs are essentially acting as braces in the y direction. What are your thoughts?