tdstructural
Structural
- Jun 12, 2010
- 29
I’m working for a mechanical fabrication facility and we need to perform tests to determine the capacity of our lift lugs on our Air Handling Units (AHU). These units are commercial and some are extremely large and the lift forces can be 4k – 5k in some cases.
I’m not concerned about the lift lug itself – it’s really beefy and calcs out with a really small Demand to Capacity Ratios.
The lift lugs are welded to the exterior vertical face of HSS framing members in the bottom of the AHU. My concern is with the connection to the perimeter base member and the capacity of the perimeter base member. We have performed some pull tests on the assemblies and at thinner wall HSS members the vertical exterior face of the tube plastically deforms. With our thicker tubes we sometimes break the weld between the lift lug and the vertical exterior face of the tube. Those are the modes of failure I expect to see in our new tests.
I should tell you that I’ve tried to perform calculations for the assemblies but my results are extremely low and I know from testing that the true capacity is much greater than what the calculations yield. The welded connection includes some proprietary information so I can’t explain to you why the hand calcs don’t work and I also can’t provide a sketch – please just take my word for it – hand calcs are not adequate.
I’m trying to determine how many tests for each tube size we should perform. I can’t find any literature that gives advice so my first question – does anyone know of a guide I can use for steel assembly testing?
If there isn’t a guide how about your input for a debate I’ve been having with my co-worker. He is using the code requirement of 20 tests for concrete as a guide and thinks that since steel is more homogenous and also we have control over the fabrication that 10 tests for each assembly is sufficient.
I think utilizing the Aluminum Design Manual Appendix 1 method should be sufficient. They require a minimum of 4 tests to get a Factor of Safety (FS) of 2.5. You can perform more tests if you want to reduce that FS but because these are lift lugs we plan on using a minimum FS of 3.0 so we don’t need to increase the number of tests just to reduce the FS. I feel that steel and aluminum are similar and this method could work for steel.
We just want to make sure we have enough tests to support our design but of course don’t want to waste company money on too much testing.
I’m not concerned about the lift lug itself – it’s really beefy and calcs out with a really small Demand to Capacity Ratios.
The lift lugs are welded to the exterior vertical face of HSS framing members in the bottom of the AHU. My concern is with the connection to the perimeter base member and the capacity of the perimeter base member. We have performed some pull tests on the assemblies and at thinner wall HSS members the vertical exterior face of the tube plastically deforms. With our thicker tubes we sometimes break the weld between the lift lug and the vertical exterior face of the tube. Those are the modes of failure I expect to see in our new tests.
I should tell you that I’ve tried to perform calculations for the assemblies but my results are extremely low and I know from testing that the true capacity is much greater than what the calculations yield. The welded connection includes some proprietary information so I can’t explain to you why the hand calcs don’t work and I also can’t provide a sketch – please just take my word for it – hand calcs are not adequate.
I’m trying to determine how many tests for each tube size we should perform. I can’t find any literature that gives advice so my first question – does anyone know of a guide I can use for steel assembly testing?
If there isn’t a guide how about your input for a debate I’ve been having with my co-worker. He is using the code requirement of 20 tests for concrete as a guide and thinks that since steel is more homogenous and also we have control over the fabrication that 10 tests for each assembly is sufficient.
I think utilizing the Aluminum Design Manual Appendix 1 method should be sufficient. They require a minimum of 4 tests to get a Factor of Safety (FS) of 2.5. You can perform more tests if you want to reduce that FS but because these are lift lugs we plan on using a minimum FS of 3.0 so we don’t need to increase the number of tests just to reduce the FS. I feel that steel and aluminum are similar and this method could work for steel.
We just want to make sure we have enough tests to support our design but of course don’t want to waste company money on too much testing.