Adalius
Mechanical
- Feb 13, 2009
- 57
When bidding small fabrications, I often am asked to quote simple beams, usually with a single centered point load or two point loads (both symmetrical and asymmetrical), sometimes with a column on each end (I haven't seen us do any jobs with a midspan column). Conceptually, they usually are similar to a gantry. We send all this out to a 3rd party engineer once we actually get the job, but to bid it I often need to get a rough idea on beam/column sizes before getting the engineer's billing meter started. One of our other estimators with no real clue of anything engineering related tried to guesstimate what size beam he needed, added a small margin on the price for error, got the job, the engineer came back with a substantially bigger beam, and he ran over cost and lost money on the job. As a new estimator, I'm trying to avoid getting into that pitfall by using a little knowledge to get me closer to the ball when I bid so I'm not losing money right out the gate...
I have a copy of AISC Steel Construction Manual (13th Ed). Looking at it I understand the concept of moment of inertia (specifically that in terms of beams it can be x-x or y-y for strong or weak way, in general a bigger moment supports more load, that kind of stuff). I also understand that I should be using span / 200 or span / 400 (depending on who I asked) to calculate my maximum allowable deflection in the beam. I'm completely dumbfounded how to relate the information I have into using the available moment vs unbraced span length graphs to properly size a beam (or how available moment in kip-ft relates to point loads for that matter).
I also have the Beam Boy software, so in trying to figure this out, I've used that to sort of brute force find a beam by repeatedly checking until my deflection was good and then going to AISC tables to find the lightest beam I could with a comparable moment of inertia, but I would presume it would be faster if I could just learn how to do the proper calculations. Beam Boy also throws moment and bending stress charts at me, I'm not sure how to relate those against the beam charts to ensure that it will be close to the right size? It will do me no good to pick a beam on deflection only to find out that it has a stress way beyond the steel's capacity or something, right?
So my questions:
1. Am I correct in presuming that when the software throws out a maximum bending stress, I need to keep that below (with a safety margin) the Fy listed for the steel in AISC? I.e. if it shows a 36ksi beam, I need that stress number to be below 30ksi (or something) for example?
2. The software throws out moment in lb-ft, should I be looking at a particular value in the AISC book for a given beam size to compare that against? Do I literally just divide it by 1000 to get kips-ft and use that with the moment vs unbraced length chart? If so do I look up the moment on the ASD or the LRFD side?
3. Given that I have load weights and locations and a maximum deflection, can someone walk me through the steps to utilize that coupled with the AISC book to properly size the beam?
4. Similarly, how do I then translate that into properly sizing columns using the AISC book?
Any help would be appreciated.
I have a copy of AISC Steel Construction Manual (13th Ed). Looking at it I understand the concept of moment of inertia (specifically that in terms of beams it can be x-x or y-y for strong or weak way, in general a bigger moment supports more load, that kind of stuff). I also understand that I should be using span / 200 or span / 400 (depending on who I asked) to calculate my maximum allowable deflection in the beam. I'm completely dumbfounded how to relate the information I have into using the available moment vs unbraced span length graphs to properly size a beam (or how available moment in kip-ft relates to point loads for that matter).
I also have the Beam Boy software, so in trying to figure this out, I've used that to sort of brute force find a beam by repeatedly checking until my deflection was good and then going to AISC tables to find the lightest beam I could with a comparable moment of inertia, but I would presume it would be faster if I could just learn how to do the proper calculations. Beam Boy also throws moment and bending stress charts at me, I'm not sure how to relate those against the beam charts to ensure that it will be close to the right size? It will do me no good to pick a beam on deflection only to find out that it has a stress way beyond the steel's capacity or something, right?
So my questions:
1. Am I correct in presuming that when the software throws out a maximum bending stress, I need to keep that below (with a safety margin) the Fy listed for the steel in AISC? I.e. if it shows a 36ksi beam, I need that stress number to be below 30ksi (or something) for example?
2. The software throws out moment in lb-ft, should I be looking at a particular value in the AISC book for a given beam size to compare that against? Do I literally just divide it by 1000 to get kips-ft and use that with the moment vs unbraced length chart? If so do I look up the moment on the ASD or the LRFD side?
3. Given that I have load weights and locations and a maximum deflection, can someone walk me through the steps to utilize that coupled with the AISC book to properly size the beam?
4. Similarly, how do I then translate that into properly sizing columns using the AISC book?
Any help would be appreciated.