Hi rb1957,
Figured this was the easiest way to respond, see green text below.
Fh will cause a small bending moment on the beam (offset from the NA) I know it will, that is why there is a BM_FH. Is there something wrong with this?
I don't like using a -ve sign for the compression bending stress. the compression bending stress does not have to be the -ve of the tension stress. At least that is what I think the 3rd term means. Im not sure what you mean here, I havent made anything negative (in the VM equation the negatives come from the formula not the direction of the variables
I think you haven't combined the stresses correctly. The beam has two stresses acting on any section ... What is the correct way to add them?
1) normal stress due to compression (Fh) and various bending stresses, and
2) shear stress.
I would strongly advise a more rigorous approach to analysis.
1) the beam is suspended by the lift. You know the weight of the beam, and so the forces in the lift. Yes, I know you have Fh and Fv for the lift forces, but it helps relating these to w (or W*L) Im looking for the approach here not the actual values, all I need to know is how to add the BM due to the weight and the BM due to F_H, why does it matter if they are in terms of W or not?
2) then look at the beam ... a SS beam with a UDL. You can define the moment at any point; note the moment due the weight (w) opposes the moment due to the lift (Fv). Yes that is why I have not included the BM due to F_V
3) define the loads at any point (axial, bending, shear)
4) calculate stresses. Going straight to stress loses some of the connection of the parameters. For example, which stresses combine ? Eg shear stress is maximum at the NA where bending stress is zero (so it combines with the axial load). How can I combine shear stress and axial stress without using VM?
5) be very careful about allowable stresses. the allowable for the axial compression is not Fcy, but column stress (Euler, well modified Euler ... a column with an offset load). Im going to use the axial compressive stress to do a buckling calc but I need to do a yield calc as well (one that includes the the relevant stresses (I think I only need to include the BM due to F_H and BM_W and Axial stress F_HC
The error in your drawing is that you show M due to Fh and M due to w in the same sense ... they are opposite. Why are they opposite?
I also think your interpretation of (what I think is) von mises stress is incorrect. The axial stress due to Fh is directly additive to the bending stresses rather than being separate terms. Ive never added a axial stress and a bending stress directly, the whole reason I am using VM is to add the axial stress and the total BM (combination of the 2 bending moments)
If I'm wrong (won't be the first or last time) please explain your stress calc. The stress calc is just plain VM from the text book, Im not sure what you are asking here
another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?