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Any structural engineers out there?

fehren2800

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2014
Messages
50
Location
NE Ohio Rustbelt
I am trying to find out the allowable load of an American standard I beam with a depth of 12" and a flange width of 5" at a span of 14' with fixed ends.

Thanks.
 
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AndyA

Well-known member
Joined
May 23, 2011
Messages
514
Location
Texas Near Dallas
If it's really an "S" beam with a 5" wide flange, then it must be an S12x31.8

Load tables for uniform load, simply supported, over 14 feet shows 42.9k (ASD)
Derating for point load drops you to 21.45k
Uprating for fixed ends puts you back at 42.9k

Will your end connections take the weight?
Will your end connections properly take the bending moment to qualify for the "fixed ends" uprating?
Are your end connections capable of taking side loading, or dynamic loading of whatever you're hanging on the beam?
Will your end connections prevent the beam from twisting? Will you need "anti-twist" bracing at points other than just the ends?
Are your end connections welded or bolted?
How do you know the connection is strong enough? How many bolts? What diameter? What pattern? What thickness of weld? Are you capable of performing a quality weld?

I don't want to be negative nancy, and I wouldn't discourage anyone from attempting a project. Be sure to learn enough to do it correctly before you attempt it.
 
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fehren2800

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2014
Messages
50
Location
NE Ohio Rustbelt
It is in fact an S12x31.8

Not going to be supporting anything near that weight. Just looking for a general guide. 4 ton max loading. Thanks.


If it's really an "S" beam with a 5" wide flange, then it must be an S12x31.8

Load tables for uniform load, simply supported, over 14 feet shows 42.9k (ASD)
Derating for point load drops you to 21.45k
Uprating for fixed ends puts you back at 42.9k

Will your end connections take the weight?
Will your end connections properly take the bending moment to qualify for the "fixed ends" uprating?
Are your end connections capable of taking side loading, or dynamic loading of whatever you're hanging on the beam?
Will your end connections prevent the beam from twisting? Will you need "anti-twist" bracing at points other than just the ends?
Are your end connections welded or bolted?
How do you know the connection is strong enough? How many bolts? What diameter? What pattern? What thickness of weld? Are you capable of performing a quality weld?

I don't want to be negative nancy, and I wouldn't discourage anyone from attempting a project. Be sure to learn enough to do it correctly before you attempt it.
 

Engineering

New member
Joined
Oct 3, 2014
Messages
3
If you don't know or are not qualified, I'd highly recommend hiring one on for the calculation. Just remember free internet advise is always accurate and without fault.
 
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fehren2800

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2014
Messages
50
Location
NE Ohio Rustbelt
If you don't know or are not qualified, I'd highly recommend hiring one on for the calculation. Just remember free internet advise is always accurate and without fault.

Just thinking about something. Not actually building. If I were I would most certainly contact a qualified person to check my ideas. Thanks.
 
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