Don Suverkrop, P.E. |
3513 Century Drive Bakersfield, CA 93306-1238 |
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LET $PROFIT$ DRIVE BEAM & COLUMN SELECTION! |
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WINBEAM
unerringly selects least weight beams
Choose realistically sized, least cost beams and columns
Practical Examples Under San Diego's height limits, the depth of floor beams impacts the number of revenue producing floors that can be built. To the investors paying the bills meeting ROI goals comes first. In other industries much steel is selected without benefit of formal structural review. For example, at mine sites miles of channel iron "stringers" are used to support belt conveyors. While public hazard is minimal the economic waste from oversize can be substantial. In one case this amounted to $52,000. With millions of conveyors in place this is not small money. The informal selection methods common to small fabricators, welding shops, trailer builders, agricultural machinery manufacturers etc. should be brought into review. Most of us consider the authority in these matters to be the AISC Manual of Steel Construction. The selection process therein involves first establishing:
This "wish-list" is matched to a beam or column shape that will fulfill requirements within applicable codes. For the uninitiated the task is formidable, invites computational errors and does not encourage looking at alternatives or fully taking cost into account. CREATIVE ENGINEERING addresses some of these problems with
WINBEAM by adapting
code from WINBELT, a program used worldwide for over 20 years for the design of
belt conveyors and their supporting trusses. PROGRAM ACHIEVES LEAST COST The shape data base within WINBEAM includes all W, M, S, HP and C shapes listed in the AISC Manual. The Program automatically finds and displays the least weight shape in each category that will meet requirements.
Moment-area theorems are the computation methods used to reduce complexity for the user. An important plus is better portrayal of slopes and deflections across support points.
Selection is first made from a data base that simulates the AISC MOMENT OF INERTIA SELECTION TABLE. For many this might be all that is needed. For others a few key strokes and clicks of the mouse WINBEAM finds the least weight/cost member, within a selected depth range that will fulfill requirements, essential to maximizing architectural flexibility. SELECTING A LEAST COST COLUMN Data entry for a column selection includes axial force, height and for both X and Y axis, moment and unbraced length. Selection of column size addresses the same data base used for beams. When the combined stress relations are satisfied the least weight column shape is displayed. | ||||