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CorTen
I was wanting a guess as to what weight these panels I have been putting up
by myself weigh. Now that I have a system, they are much easier, but still, a PITA with all the rigging and rerigging. One piece is 3.5' x 7'. I have two pieces to complete the 40' run. I have found a value of 1.83# / sf for 18 ga., but this stuff looks thicker. I do not have a gauge gauge. It is a common seagoing container. The stickers say not to replace or repair with anything but Corten, but after that, I find little information. The tare weight is there for the whole container, but that includes beams and doors, floors, et al, and I know I could not get a value per square foot for just the siding. Any SWAG's or educated estimates? Steve |
CorTen
Steve B wrote:
I was wanting a guess as to what weight these panels I have been putting up by myself weigh. Now that I have a system, they are much easier, but still, a PITA with all the rigging and rerigging. One piece is 3.5' x 7'. I have two pieces to complete the 40' run. I have found a value of 1.83# / sf for 18 ga., but this stuff looks thicker. I do not have a gauge gauge. It is a common seagoing container. The stickers say not to replace or repair with anything but Corten, but after that, I find little information. The tare weight is there for the whole container, but that includes beams and doors, floors, et al, and I know I could not get a value per square foot for just the siding. Any SWAG's or educated estimates? Steve Google is your friend . I figgered out that the pieces my friend Bill the Machinist gave mea coupla days ago (~.087" thick) are 13 guage by using an online gauge reference . -- Snag Learning keeps you young ! |
CorTen
"Steve B" wrote in message . .. I was wanting a guess as to what weight these panels I have been putting up by myself weigh. Now that I have a system, they are much easier, but still, a PITA with all the rigging and rerigging. One piece is 3.5' x 7'. I have two pieces to complete the 40' run. I have found a value of 1.83# / sf for 18 ga., but this stuff looks thicker. I do not have a gauge gauge. It is a common seagoing container. The stickers say not to replace or repair with anything but Corten, but after that, I find little information. The tare weight is there for the whole container, but that includes beams and doors, floors, et al, and I know I could not get a value per square foot for just the siding. Any SWAG's or educated estimates? Steve Got a micrometer gauge? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_metal Steel a foot square by an inch thick weighs 40 lbs for figurin' purposes, so 18 Ga which is nearly 1/20" thick should weigh 2 lbs per square foot. jsw |
CorTen
"Jim Wilkins" wrote in message ... ... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_metal Steel a foot square by an inch thick weighs 40 lbs for figurin' purposes, so 18 Ga which is nearly 1/20" thick should weigh 2 lbs per square foot. jsw This one gives the weight for gauges: http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/ga...eet-d_915.html Notice that the thicknesses were chosen for their convenient fractional weights in lbs / sq foot. jsw |
CorTen
On Fri, 11 Nov 2011 16:08:07 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote: I was wanting a guess as to what weight these panels I have been putting up by myself weigh. Now that I have a system, they are much easier, but still, a PITA with all the rigging and rerigging. One piece is 3.5' x 7'. I have two pieces to complete the 40' run. I have found a value of 1.83# / sf for 18 ga., but this stuff looks thicker. I do not have a gauge gauge. It is a common seagoing container. The stickers say not to replace or repair with anything but Corten, but after that, I find little information. The tare weight is there for the whole container, but that includes beams and doors, floors, et al, and I know I could not get a value per square foot for just the siding. Any SWAG's or educated estimates? Steve Why not calculate how many cubic ft., inch, there is in a slab and or use an on line calculator like http://www.portlandbolt.com/steel-plate-weight.html which tells me that your flat 7 x 3.5 ft sheets weight: ..065 = 64.97 lbs ..125 = 124.94 lbs ..250 = 249.87 lbs and so on. If the stuff is corrugated then you need to calculate the flat width or find a corrugated sheet calculator. -- John B. |
CorTen
"John B." wrote in message ... On Fri, 11 Nov 2011 16:08:07 -0800, "Steve B" wrote: I was wanting a guess as to what weight these panels I have been putting up by myself weigh. Now that I have a system, they are much easier, but still, a PITA with all the rigging and rerigging. One piece is 3.5' x 7'. I have two pieces to complete the 40' run. I have found a value of 1.83# / sf for 18 ga., but this stuff looks thicker. I do not have a gauge gauge. It is a common seagoing container. The stickers say not to replace or repair with anything but Corten, but after that, I find little information. The tare weight is there for the whole container, but that includes beams and doors, floors, et al, and I know I could not get a value per square foot for just the siding. Any SWAG's or educated estimates? Steve Why not calculate how many cubic ft., inch, there is in a slab and or use an on line calculator like http://www.portlandbolt.com/steel-plate-weight.html which tells me that your flat 7 x 3.5 ft sheets weight: .065 = 64.97 lbs .125 = 124.94 lbs .250 = 249.87 lbs and so on. If the stuff is corrugated then you need to calculate the flat width or find a corrugated sheet calculator. -- John B. It's Sunday, and I finished 40' x 3.5' of hanging the stuff on a vertical frame 10' off the ground, using just a little hoist and knowledge of rigging. That's still a lot of trips up and down the ladder. I'm taking today off. And besides, I belong to this newsgroup. So I figure that someone here will be smart enough to just tell me. And then, when they have something that I know, I just tell them back. At 3# per sf, that comes up to about 75# per. They seemed heavier than that. A lot heavier. But I didn't drop one. I did drop the whole hoist once, but it landed on soft dirt. Glad to have that portion of the job done. Now I can start closing it up, and building the doors, and insulating. Steve Steve |
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