CTW
Structural
- May 30, 2002
- 312
I'm evaluating a steel "bucket" with four legs attached to the side. The "bucket" is simply what you envision. A cylinder with a bottom. The top is open. There are four legs that are symmetrically placed around the perimeter and welded to the side of the bucket but not attached to the floor. The bucket will be heated to 750 deg F. I started looking at this as the legs restraining the thermal expansion of the bucket at the location of the legs only and the bucket being allowed to expand in the areas between the legs. But I'm second guessing this now and would like some other opinions. It seems to me that the high thermal stresses combined with the retraint from the legs would warp the perimeter of the bucket if not fail it depending on the grade of steel used.