OneEyedMan
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2015
- Messages
- 157
Are there any texts that reference formulas and practice for elevated slabs? Are there so many variables that only an engineering firm can calculate the design? Asking for a friend.
lolAsking for a friend.
Generally, yes. An engineer is needed to design a custom slab. Little things can turn a simple slab into a relatively complex engineering problem.Are there any texts that reference formulas and practice for elevated slabs? Are there so many variables that only an engineering firm can calculate the design?
Exactly. I would very much enjoy learning every detail that goes into designing a steel and concrete structure. In lieu of traveling back to my young self to sell the virtues of pursuing an engineering career, I would like some hard fast parameters.Elevated Slabs for Dummies, Page 36....
I had looked at doing a ground formed slab by backfilling a foundation with sand and using extra rebar. A FB find of pan decking changed my outlook. Proposed project is 12’ span, 80’ length, now using pan decking on 4x6 ledger angle anchored to 8” walls. #6 rebar on 1’ grid. Not sure it’s enough, was told 6” slab would work but thinking 8”. I don’t know if extra is enough or not. Point load could justify the extra though not a driveway area.What size slab?
We do structural concrete slabs in garages with integral grade beams. The dirt is a one shot mold for the concrete and its loose fill. Over time, the dirt below the slab compresses and sinks away leaving the structural slab floating by its perimeter support as it was designed.
If the dirt below the slab were to be fully removed (as some folks later do by making an entrance from the basement) they create a room below the slab. Or you provide robust form work to support the concrete until it sets up.
Can you elaborate?And 8” or so can be done with card board boxes designed for the purpose.
Can you elaborate?
Not a bad idea to rotate the orientation 90 degrees. I can get 14” H beam to span 12’. One project manager I talked to, not an engineer but the guy doing the building, said they did 8’ spans with this decking with 6” concrete and #4 bar and were good for a 10k forklift to drive on. Not engineering terms, but something to start at.This is not the time for guessing. A 12’ single span with 6-8 inches of concrete and rebar is going to be pretty heavy. It will require some serious decking. You might consider beams for the 12’ span and running the decking the eighty foot way. The ledge angle can be a lighter, the decking and rebar can be lighter and make sure you are using galvanized Conform decking.
This is probably a more complicated design than the slab design itself.now using pan decking on 4x6 ledger angle anchored to 8” walls.
So first you need to pick a geometry. I don't even know if I can even list them. Like for instance:Exactly. I would very much enjoy learning every detail that goes into designing a steel and concrete structure. In lieu of traveling back to my young self to sell the virtues of pursuing an engineering career, I would like some hard fast parameters.
The correct gauge of pan deck will span 12’, I’ve poured lots like that; but not making an engineering judgement here. An 8” slab will be weaker than a 6” if not correctly reinforced, and you would have to reshore a 8” slab, possibly a 6” as well.. Contact a structural engineer..I had looked at doing a ground formed slab by backfilling a foundation with sand and using extra rebar. A FB find of pan decking changed my outlook. Proposed project is 12’ span, 80’ length, now using pan decking on 4x6 ledger angle anchored to 8” walls. #6 rebar on 1’ grid. Not sure it’s enough, was told 6” slab would work but thinking 8”. I don’t know if extra is enough or not. Point load could justify the extra though not a driveway area.
