Assume I have a SYP 4x4 post and on top of it I have one of these
http://www.ellisok.com/ellisok/products_T_head.html
The top member, or top of the T would be a SYP 4x4, 3' long with 2' to
one side of the post and 1' to the other side of the post. On the 2'
side would be 3/4 plywood triangles nailed (maybe through bolted) to
the sides of the post and the 2' side of the T.
How do I calculate the maximum load on the 1' side before the top 4x4
will shear off?
This load would be gradually applied.
I have found span charts and tables but nothing to determine the
failure load of a 4x4 cantilevered 1'.
Ascii diagram (fixed font):
side view how
much
v
____________________________________
| . . . . . . ___________ |
|__________________|___________|_____|
\ | |
\ Plywood |___|
\ traingles | . |
\ on both | . |
\ sides | . |
\ | . |
\ | . |
\ | . |
\ | . |
\ | . |
\ | . |
| |
What is the dimension of the 4x4? Their product description does not
state that it fits a 3.5x3.5" piece of lumber. "DESCRIPTION: This
product is made to fit 4x4 Ellis Shores only. 4x4s or 4x6s can be
used for T member." Lumber used in commercial construction may be
actual dimensions, not residential dimensions which is surfaced 4
sides to some nominal dimension like 3.5x3.5" instead of 4x4 it is
listed as. Sometimes that construction lumber may be of woods like oak
without knots or nominal knots. SYP is often pretty knotty.
Simpson has a good number of fasteners used in residential
construction.
An engineer might tell you what the cantilever load might be but with
such a tiny piece of lumber subject to knots is might only be 10
pounds. The engineer would probably not risk making a prediction using
a non-standard construction method. SYP 3.5x3.5" posts are generally
installed and loaded in a vertical way, not horizontally. I know that
I would never try to build anything with any significant load with syp
4.x4.
You left off what you are trying to do and what the weight is on that
cantilever.
On Sun, 2 Mar 2008 20:04:37 -0800 (PST), Limp Arbor
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Assume I have a SYP 4x4 post and on top of it I have one of these
>http://www.ellisok.com/ellisok/products_T_head.html
>
>The top member, or top of the T would be a SYP 4x4, 3' long with 2' to
>one side of the post and 1' to the other side of the post. On the 2'
>side would be 3/4 plywood triangles nailed (maybe through bolted) to
>the sides of the post and the 2' side of the T.
>
>How do I calculate the maximum load on the 1' side before the top 4x4
>will shear off?
>This load would be gradually applied.
>
>I have found span charts and tables but nothing to determine the
>failure load of a 4x4 cantilevered 1'.
>
>
>Ascii diagram (fixed font):
>side view how
> much
> v
> ____________________________________
>| . . . . . . ___________ |
>|__________________|___________|_____|
> \ | |
> \ Plywood |___|
> \ traingles | . |
> \ on both | . |
> \ sides | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> | |
"Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:42786926-9e9d-4b68-b6c2-1efa18363233@n75g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
> Assume I have a SYP 4x4 post and on top of it I have one of these
> http://www.ellisok.com/ellisok/products_T_head.html
>
> The top member, or top of the T would be a SYP 4x4, 3' long with 2' to
> one side of the post and 1' to the other side of the post. On the 2'
> side would be 3/4 plywood triangles nailed (maybe through bolted) to
> the sides of the post and the 2' side of the T.
>
> How do I calculate the maximum load on the 1' side before the top 4x4
> will shear off?
> This load would be gradually applied.
>
> I have found span charts and tables but nothing to determine the
> failure load of a 4x4 cantilevered 1'.
>
Impossible to conclude until you determine the characteristics of the steel
plate that makes up the T-head. It's not about cantilever - it's about the
bracket you are using to build what is almost a cantilever. You need to
contact the manufacturer of the bracket for this information. It's just not
a wood strength question.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
"Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:42786926-9e9d-4b68-b6c2-1efa18363233@n75g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
> Assume I have a SYP 4x4 post and on top of it I have one of these
> http://www.ellisok.com/ellisok/products_T_head.html
>
> The top member, or top of the T would be a SYP 4x4, 3' long with 2' to
> one side of the post and 1' to the other side of the post. On the 2'
> side would be 3/4 plywood triangles nailed (maybe through bolted) to
> the sides of the post and the 2' side of the T.
>
> How do I calculate the maximum load on the 1' side before the top 4x4
> will shear off?
> This load would be gradually applied.
>
> I have found span charts and tables but nothing to determine the
> failure load of a 4x4 cantilevered 1'.
>
>
> Ascii diagram (fixed font):
> side view how
> much
> v
> ____________________________________
> | . . . . . . ___________ |
> |__________________|___________|_____|
> \ | |
> \ Plywood |___|
> \ traingles | . |
> \ on both | . |
> \ sides | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> \ | . |
> | |
First, I suspect that some kind of shearing of the 4x4 will not be the
primary mode of failure of this structure. How tall of a 4x4 are we talking
here? Any thoughts on how much load you are thinking about putting on?
todd