cedarbluffranch
Mechanical
- Jul 17, 2008
- 131
I posted this in a different forum - hopefully this forum is a better place to post it.
In Anchorage, AK, a man built a 25 foot tall snowman in his front yard. The city disapproves and says the structure is unsafe without doing any sort of engineering analysis.
If I was an Alaska PE, I think this would be a very interesting engineering analysis. However - I don't have any textbook references on the structural stability of snow. I am speculating that a person would look at the load bearing capacity of snow and the estimated weight of the snowman to determine if the lowest amount of snow was likely to fail under the weight of the snow.
Can anyone offer any insights on this?
You can see an article about it at
Thanks!
In Anchorage, AK, a man built a 25 foot tall snowman in his front yard. The city disapproves and says the structure is unsafe without doing any sort of engineering analysis.
If I was an Alaska PE, I think this would be a very interesting engineering analysis. However - I don't have any textbook references on the structural stability of snow. I am speculating that a person would look at the load bearing capacity of snow and the estimated weight of the snowman to determine if the lowest amount of snow was likely to fail under the weight of the snow.
Can anyone offer any insights on this?
You can see an article about it at
Thanks!