1 / 94

Structural Collapse Technician Training – Ver 3.1

Structural Collapse Technician Training – Ver 3.1. Module : 4 – Part c Lifting & Moving Critical Angles Concrete Anchor Sys Lifting Equipment & Techniques Cranes & Rigging. Jan08. 9Jul12. Critical Angles. Critical Angle Considerations. 120 DEGREES. 500 lbs Tension. 500 lbs Tension.

xerxes
Télécharger la présentation

Structural Collapse Technician Training – Ver 3.1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Structural Collapse Technician Training – Ver 3.1 Module : 4 – Part c Lifting & Moving Critical Angles Concrete Anchor Sys Lifting Equipment & Techniques Cranes & Rigging Jan08 9Jul12

  2. Critical Angles

  3. Critical Angle Considerations 120 DEGREES 500 lbs Tension 500 lbs Tension Load 500 lbs.. 120 degrees is 1/3 of a 360 degree circle Too Flat of Angle for Heavy Lifting

  4. Critical Angle Considerations Bigger Angle Reduces Horizontal Force in Anchors and Tension Force inSling Smaller Angle Increases Horizontal Force in Anchors and Tension in Sling

  5. Effects Of Sling Angles 707lb 500lb 500lb 575lb 575lb 707lb 1000lb 1000lb • As the angle gets flatter, more horizontal force (compression) is generated at the top of the Load • In order to provide the same (500 lb) vertical lift, the sling tension becomes larger, since it must lift + compress the load (or spreader bar) 866 lb 500 lb 288 lb 0 lb 1000lb 1000lb 1000lb 1000lb 90 deg 60 deg 45 deg 30 deg

  6. Steeper Angles for Faster Currents When In Doubt, Let It Out Compensating for Loading

  7. Concrete Anchors Systems Wedge AnchorsConcrete ScrewsThrough Bolts Undercut Anchors

  8. Wedge Anchors Torque controlled, expansion anchors require clean, proper sized holes, set with Torque Wrench. Have Reduced Capacity in Cracked Concrete

  9. Small Concrete Screws • Hilti, Simpson or Topcon • Use 1/4” to connect devices - Smartlevels • Need drill & driver • drill bit in each box • use Std. hex driver • Use 1/4” x 1 1/4” for connecting devices • I” embedment • 175 lb tension 350 lb shear (design load)

  10. Larger Concrete Screws • Size 3/8”, 1/2”, & 5/8”” • May use instead of wedge anchors for light lifting • More of Undercut Anchor • Should work better in cracked concrete • Need drill and impact driver • Simpson & Hilti easy to drive, but requires deep penetration • Tension or Shear • 3/8” screw w/ 3 3/4” embed has strength similar to 1/2” wedge anchors (2000lb Ten & Shear)

  11. Through BoltSimplest and best but not often possible Bolt or rod with double nuts and a large washer

  12. Undercut Anchors Requires precision hole w / special bit.when bolt is tightened, prongs extend from bolt to bear on enlarged surface of hole Not Practical for US&R

  13. Spacing & edge distance • Min edge distance = 6 x diameter of bolt • Min spacing = 12 x diameter of bolt • Min depth = 6 dia x diameter of bolt • Better depth = 9 dia x diameter of bolt

  14. Strength Reducers Cracks Too close to edge Overlap cones - too close spacing

  15. Ultimate Load vs Design Load • Working load = Allowable working load • Working load = Design Load • Design load = 1/4 ultimate load • Design load = 1/5 ultimate for moving systems • Proof load = 2 x working load (Most MFRs do not use the term “Safe”)

  16. Installation • Hole size very important • Use metal detector to avoid rebar • Need to clean holes, especially for epoxy • Torque all expansion bolts = test • Adhesive anchors require very clean hole, set time, and limited vibration • Acrylic, get initial set in 7 min & full cure in 35 min. at 60 degrees F • Also Acrylic can be set under water and at 0 degrees F • Concrete screws require drill bit & driver

  17. Installation of Hoist Ring & Wedge Anchor

  18. Hammer Anchor into place Make sure that hammer strikes nut, not top of anchor

  19. Torque Anchor To 50 Ft-lb

  20. Difficult to know the concrete’s ability to hold itself, use caution when using bolts.

  21. Lifting Devices • Steel Swivel Hoist Rings/Hooks • Eye Nuts • Steel Angles • Used only when a better way of connecting to concrete is not available. (Sling, strap, or wire rope choker is not practical).

  22. Steel Swivel Hoist Rings

  23. Steel Swivel Hoist Rings • Pivot 180 deg & swivel 360 deg • Usually are proof load tested • Use with wedge anchor • Remove machine bolt (replace after use) • Torque required for wedge anchor is greater than torque listed for Hoist Ring but works fine for better quality Hoist Ring. • Don’t buy Hoist Rings w/o testing them, (buy only from known manufacturer)

  24. Use with shackles to create connection points. Prevents load from spinning, twisting sling legs Swivel Hooks

  25. Eye Nuts • Attach over nut of installed wedge anchor • Load in tension only (within 15 deg.) • Capacity determined by anchor and depth • Tightened eye to nut

  26. Eye Nut Strength Reductions (not the shackle) 30% strength at 45 deg 0% strength at 90 deg Not Recommended 100% strength at 0 deg

  27. Steel Angles • Must be engineered • Need minimum of two anchor bolts • Use only if other methods are not available 2000lb Two -1/2” wedge anchors L3x3x1/2x0-9 1” hole 9/16” holes 1 1/2” 6” Could use 2-3/8 x 4” concrete screws, 2000lb lift

  28. Steel Tee • Use with 1/2”x 5 ½ ” Wedge Anchors or 3/8”x 4” Screws • Best for tension loads but may be loaded in shear as shown 2000lb * 1 ½” 2000lb 13/16” hole WT3x7.5x0-4 2- ½”x 5 ½” Wedge Anch. in 9/16” holes 3 ½” * = value of wedge anch is reduced due to spacing

  29. Rigging Tools

  30. Wire Rope Terms Rope core: FC, IWRC, WSC Wire rope Strand wire

  31. Wire Rope Inspection • Should be done on regular basis • Check for: • Broken wires - depends on location • Crushed strands • Kinks, bird caging, & protruding core • Stretch, diameter reduction • Abrasion and corrosion • Fatigue and electric arc

  32. Wire Rope: Discard Conditions Kinks Bird Cage Popped Core

  33. Wire Rope: Discard Conditions Core failure strands bind and take oval shape lay angle increases Rope stretch reduce diameter and increase lay

  34. Wire Rope Clips U bolt & Fist Grip (80%) Flemish Eye (95%) Fold Back Eye (Don’t use for lifting) Wire Rope Loop Terminations

  35. Cable Clips – and Thimbles Need Seizing at rope end • Clips are installed in succession & torqued per Manufacturers Instructions. • Example shows loop end w/ & w/o thimble. One clip width

  36. Cable Clip - Installation • Turn back, place 1st clip & tighten • 2nd clip only snug • Place other clips at equal spacing • Apply tension and tighten clips • Recheck nut torque after initial operations See Crosby Panel 16

  37. There are two types of Alloy Lifting Chain Grade 8 & Grade 10 Marking; A, T, 8, 80, or 800, for 10 mark = 10 or 100 Only use these grades of chains for US&R Lifting Chain Sling Identification

  38. Chain Sling Problems Chain Twisted Gouged stretch links links

  39. Nylon & PolyesterWeb Slings • Unilink fittings • Triangle and choker fittings • Triangle fittings both ends • Flat eye on both ends • Twisted eye on both ends • Endless (grommet) • Endless with reverse eyes • Note tag

  40. Synthetic SlingsWeb and Round

  41. Synthetic Sling Types • Nylon. • General purpose, unaffected by grease & oil, many chemicals except acids. • Loose 15% strength when wet. • Polyester. • Unaffected by most chemicals including mild acid and water. Disintegrate in sulfuric acid. • Aramid, Kevlar, Dacron, Nomex. • Resistant to most weak chemicals. • High density polyethylene. • Resistant to most chemicals.

  42. Synthetic Slings • Must include manufacturer’s sewn on tag • Gives fiber type and safe working load • Provided with protective cover - seamless • Use corner protection • Need careful inspection • Do stretch - up to 10% ; polyethylene = 1% • Very light weight and easy to use • Minimize twisting & spinning during lifting

  43. Sling Arrangements • Single vertical hitch • Basket hitch • Choker hitch • Double basket hitch • Double choker hitch • Bridle hitch

  44. Choker 3/4 X cap Vertical 1 X cap Basket 2 X cap Sling Hitch Types Capacities assuming sling angle = 90 deg (vertical)

  45. Single Basket Hitch Most efficient when H is as large as L (When legs are near Vertical)

  46. Double Basket Hitch Much better Control of Load

  47. Single Choker HitchEndless, synthetic round sling Gives same effect as a Double Choker

  48. Double Choker Hitch Enclosed angle should not be more than 90 deg for all Chokers Much better Control of Load

  49. Turnbuckle Load Binder Wire Rope/Chain Tighteners

  50. Portable Cable WinchCome a Long Safety Issues Working Load = 1.5 to 3 tons Inspect carefully Do not use Handle Extender

More Related