dfowler
Mechanical
- Sep 27, 2003
- 46
I am a mechanical engineer who seems to be a bit out of practice with my old statics and physics equations. The company I work for builds garage doors and we have an aluminum extruded strip that runs the length of the bottom of each garage door. This strip has a trough that allows us to attach our astragal which is a vinyl flap that helps seal out light and moisture from under the door. We want to rollform a shape out of steel to replace the extruded aluminum astragal retainer. The side profile of the part would be roughly a 'Z' shape with the bottom holding the vinyl astragal and the top protruding and acting as a step to help close the garage door when done manually.
I am wondering if a .034" thick 45ksi steel shape that protrudes 1.25" would permanently deflect when a person weighing 200 lbs steps on it. I think this is a fairly basic cantilever beam calculation but unfortunately I have forgotten most of that. This is a cantilever beam that protrudes 1.25" long and is .034" thick with a width of 6 to 20 feet. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
I am wondering if a .034" thick 45ksi steel shape that protrudes 1.25" would permanently deflect when a person weighing 200 lbs steps on it. I think this is a fairly basic cantilever beam calculation but unfortunately I have forgotten most of that. This is a cantilever beam that protrudes 1.25" long and is .034" thick with a width of 6 to 20 feet. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.