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Thread: Hospital Pendants Structural Calculation

  1. #1
    Associate Engineer
    Join Date
    Jan 2016
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    1

    Unhappy Hospital Pendants Structural Calculation

    Hi,

    I m asked to calculate the allowable load for a designed hospital pendant which needs to be mounted on the ceiling.
    The company has given me a similar sample to take reference but I have a lot of steps which I don't understand, so sorry there may be a lot of questions I need to ask for...

    First, at page 3, Spreading area = (560+2x90)x(311+2x90) = 740x491mm^2
    I don't know where are those numbers come from?

    And at page 4 about the Restoring moment about edge, I also don't understand the whole step, where 9.8 kN comes from and FS = 14>1.5. Does FS mean Factor of Safety?

    And last at page 6, starting from Check Restoring Moment: 3 nos. of M10 HSL
    It will be grateful if anyone could explain whole calculation steps.

    Thank you for helping
    Door Detail WD04.2.pdf
    Last edited by mpw1992; 01-12-2016 at 11:14 PM.

  2. #2
    Lead Engineer Cake of Doom's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    UK
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    433
    Having looked through this, I have to say, the engineer hasn't done a very good job of outlining his methods. In the UK it would be typical to say "blah blah requires a blah thick plate. The plate is to be analysed using the blah method." This makes it easier to check too.

    Spreading area - The only thing that comes to mind is some sort of effective area method. Without seeing the equations, its hard to say.

    Restoring moment - I'm guessing that the 9.8 kN is the factored SWL of a singular bolt. The whole step is the engineer checking the turning moment from the centre of the pendulum arm Vs. the resistance moment of the bolts.

    Check Restoring Moment - I don't know why 3 bolts are being checked when 4 have already been specified. I think he may of had a brain fart and wrote 3 No HSL M10 instead of HSL-3-M10 which is the type Hilti bolt he wants to use.

    Without being able to go through it with the designing engineer, all of the above could be a bag of BS so take it with a fat spoonful of salt.

    P.S.

    Hope it helped.

    EDIT
    I think you're correct that FS = Factor of Safety, personally, I always write FoS so it can't be confused or taken out of context with any-other loading.
    Last edited by Cake of Doom; 01-14-2016 at 10:02 AM. Reason: False Flags

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