Alwayslearningelec
Senior Member
- Location
- NJ
- Occupation
- Estimator
I can look at the product data and get that easily. So when I do I would have to somehow convert that to the load on the piece of strut?Have you figured out how much weight the conduit, strut, and wire is for say a 10' section?
It is a very large project and engineered. All they said for supports of roof conduits was to use Durablock.Is this a small project that isnt engineered? Where I worked, all electrical support was a complex design if it was hung or had large conduits spanning hallways or open spaces because of seismic calculations. Static load is one thing, wind has more factors, and seismic is a major pain. We got so many designs that were unusable but earthquake stable...
Don't think the supports were engineered.I would think the metal strut assembly would be plenty strong depending on the size bolts you use for the strut connectors. The weak link looks like that rubbery support base -- it may squish flat if overloaded. But I also wonder if the underlying roof is the weaker link. How many pounds per square foot can it take as a dead load and are they instructing you where those durablocks should be placed on the roof (hopefully near an underlying truss)? If you are at or over 1000 lbs per block, that is about like parking small cars on the roof along that whole run.
If this is engineered, you shouldn't have to ask these questions and the engineers should have already considered the strength and placement of the durablocks.
The supports I posted are to be 7' apart. So 18lbs x 7'=126lbs x 8 conduit = 1,008lbs. So that is the weight load on the piece of strut? Wouldn't it be less since the strut width( the portion the conduits rest on) is only ~2"?
Thanks so per my post #12 it would be 1,008lbs per support?All of the weight of the conduit has to be supported. Any conduit weight not directly supported by the strut is transferred through the conduit itself to the area that is supported. For a deeper dive, look up the concept of 'tributary area' in structural engineering.
When you have something like conduit supported on trapezes the _approximation_ is that each trapeze supports an equal portion of the conduit weight. So if the supports are 7 feet apart then the _approximation_ is that each support holds the weight of 7 feet of conduit. The approximation ignores the stiffness of the conduit but is usually good enough if you have proper safety factors.
Add the weight of all the conduit and wire, and divide by the number of supports. (You can find online calculators for weight per linear foot. So you could also calculate the weight per foot * distance between supports.)
Some specs ask for a safety factor - like maybe 3. So you could load each support up to 333 lbs., and not the full 1000.
Thanks so per my post #12 it would be 1,008lbs per support?
Exactly!If its an engineered job go back to them and have them design it. It's their problem
