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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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In this episode of my granite fitting saga, it appears that there won't be
enough room for the 40mm wooden beam across the twin appliance gap to support the granite. What width steel box section would have the same bending resistance as the 40mm wood specified? Also, can granite rest directly on the metal, or should there be a soft material on top, such as hardboard? Christian. |
#2
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:43:25 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: In this episode of my granite fitting saga, it appears that there won't be enough room for the 40mm wooden beam across the twin appliance gap to support the granite. What width steel box section would have the same bending resistance as the 40mm wood specified? Also, can granite rest directly on the metal, or should there be a soft material on top, such as hardboard? I would suggest using something softish, or at least some silicone sealant to allow for small movement. ..andy To email, substitute .nospam with .gl |
#3
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Christian McArdle wrote:
In this episode of my granite fitting saga, it appears that there won't be enough room for the 40mm wooden beam across the twin appliance gap to support the granite. What width steel box section would have the same bending resistance as the 40mm wood specified? Use 3mm walled box section, as thick as you can fit in there. 40mmx20mm would be plenty, but the thicker the better. Also, can granite rest directly on the metal, or should there be a soft material on top, such as hardboard? I'd want a cushion of silicone between the steel and the granite. -- Grunff |
#4
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Use 3mm walled box section, as thick as you can fit in there. 40mmx20mm
would be plenty, but the thicker the better. So 20mm high will be enough to stop the Granite cracking when the uninitiated decide to sit on the worktop? How many should I put across? I was thinking of one near the front and one in the middle. The rear will be held by some 2x3 softwood bolted to the wall. I should just squeeze 20mm in. I've got around 45mm absolute tops to play with. 40mm would be safer, making it easier to insert/retract appliances and less likely to end in tears. I can't lift the worktop another mm without serious issues elsewhere. I've got to get the beam, slate, tile adhesive and sealant in there then. I've already got the 12mm ply down, so don't need to account for that. That gives: Adhesive 3mm Slate 12mm Beam 20mm Sealant 5mm That gives me exactly 40mm, so it should be OK, provided I spread adhesive carefully. I take it I can just run a thick bed of sealant and let it dry? I don't think I want to glue the granite down? Is there a more suitable material for this anyway, such as laying thin MDF/hardboard over the entire space? Christian. |
#5
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:43:25 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: In this episode of my granite fitting saga, it appears that there won't be enough room for the 40mm wooden beam across the twin appliance gap to support the granite. What width steel box section would have the same bending resistance as the 40mm wood specified? Also, can granite rest directly on the metal, or should there be a soft material on top, such as hardboard? Christian. [T] I think the issue here is that granite isn't very flexible and most other things are? If you placed a length of your selected section on two blocks (same spacing as your cabinets) and pressed in the middle, I think you'd find pretty well anything will 'give'? Is there any way you could fit a wall bolted, 'triangular' shaped, steel brace in the middle or do you need an uncluttered space? All the best .. T i m p.s. My feelings about how much apparently rigid things bend has been enhanced since I have been using my 10 tonne hydraulic press. I gas-cut a couple of 20mm steel plates, 50cm x 25 cm to act as a bed for items on the press. The plates were a bit warped so I thought I'd have a go at bending them straight with the press. Raised the ends and pressed in the middle and they bend back easily .. (well, a couple of tonnes worth of 'easily') ;-) |
#6
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Is there any way you could fit a wall bolted, 'triangular' shaped,
steel brace in the middle or do you need an uncluttered space? I'd need to drill a very big hole through the washing machine to accommodate the brace. It might prevent the drum rotating, too. Seriously, though. I've been told that a 40mm wooden beam across the front is sufficient. I just want to know if I can reduce this using a metal beam (or several) as I don't have 40mm to play with. There is absolutely no way that any part of the structure can extend more than 25mm below the bottom of the worktop over the 121cm span. Christian. |
#7
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 09:34:14 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: Is there any way you could fit a wall bolted, 'triangular' shaped, steel brace in the middle or do you need an uncluttered space? I'd need to drill a very big hole through the washing machine to accommodate the brace. It might prevent the drum rotating, too. [T] Ok, so it's 'doable' then ;-) Seriously, though. I've been told that a 40mm wooden beam across the front is sufficient. [T] Sounds like the suppliers I know .. ;-) "Yes just hit it hard with a hammer .. it will be fine .... oh you did and it broke ... click .. brrrrrrrrrrrrrr " I just want to know if I can reduce this using a metal beam (or several) as I don't have 40mm to play with. There is absolutely no way that any part of the structure can extend more than 25mm below the bottom of the worktop over the 121cm span. [T] I see ... theres no doubt that a piece of hard wood will help but would it be enough to prevent an expensive lump of slate / marble snapping in half if someone sits / climbs on there by mistake. You have see the large glass table tops being smashed on 'Youv'e been framed' when folk treat them the wrong way? (Like when my 'terrified of heights' friend went up the CN tower and the kids were jumping up and down on the glass floor some hundreds of feet above the ground ... I would be looking for stress fractures, loosse bolts, rust or maybe NOT walk over the glass sections at all (just in case). I digress. Any decent section of steel would probably be stiffer than the same size wood. The deeper the 'wall' the stiffer the box, the problem is you would have to have it round the 'short' way. I have some lengths of 50mm x 25mm x 1.5mm thick seam welded steel box left over from when I built the garage doors. It's pretty stiff (unlike angle) and probably stiffer than the support the cupboards can provide? Sit the top on that with a couple of strips of 1mm thick double sided foam to provide the cushion and that's about the best you can do in the space? I assume you wouldn't be able to take the box section along the entire length of the worktop (this would provide more support?) All the best .. T i m |
#8
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Christian McArdle wrote:
Is there any way you could fit a wall bolted, 'triangular' shaped, steel brace in the middle or do you need an uncluttered space? I'd need to drill a very big hole through the washing machine to accommodate the brace. It might prevent the drum rotating, too. Hmmm, I take it we are talking about this layout, from your thread "Granite worktop span"? ++----+----++----+---+----+---+---+ || WM | TD || DW | +----+ | | || | || | 1 |SINK| 2 | 3 | ++----+----++----+---+ +---+---+ Support profile: ^^ 1.2m ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ You need a support 'twixt the WM and TD, yes? How about this (which is what I thought Tim meant but, judging by his reaction to your reply, it wasn't) fabricate a "shelf bracket" from angle iron and flat strip, it only needs to be 3mm thick steel, screw it _solidly_ to the wall at the back of the worktop. It will be more than strong enough. All you need is 3mm of space between the WM and TD, surely you must have that? I couldn't draw it in ASCII art, so here's a quick CAD drawing of what I mean. http://users.uk.freebsd.org/~mark/support.png Regards, Parish Seriously, though. I've been told that a 40mm wooden beam across the front is sufficient. I just want to know if I can reduce this using a metal beam (or several) as I don't have 40mm to play with. There is absolutely no way that any part of the structure can extend more than 25mm below the bottom of the worktop over the 121cm span. Christian. |
#9
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I have some lengths of 50mm x 25mm x 1.5mm thick seam welded steel box
left over from when I built the garage doors. It's pretty stiff (unlike angle) and probably stiffer than the support the cupboards can provide? 25mm is, perhaps, a little too much, but pretty close. Although the instructions call for 40mm wooden beam across the front, I am hoping that doing several structs of metal 20mm will provide enough support. I assume you wouldn't be able to take the box section along the entire length of the worktop (this would provide more support?) No. The next item is the dishwasher, which must be flush against the worktop, unlike the washing machine and tumble dryer, which have the facility to bolt the doors artificially high to cover the gap. Between the dishwasher and tumble dryer is a stud framework with a pretty column pillar on the front. The studwork is made of 47mm x 75mm softwood, so should provide enough support for the metal lintels. I was planning to channel out about 30mm for the lintel footings with a router. Christian. |
#10
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I have some lengths of 50mm x 25mm x 1.5mm thick seam welded steel box
left over from when I built the garage doors. Well, I've got a quote of 40 quid for enough 3/4" x 3/4" 16 gauge to span 3 times. That, I believe means 19mm x 19mm @ 1.5mm thick. Hopefully, this will be stiff enough to stop the Granite cracking. It also gives me space for a 5mm MDF sheet over the top, which should make the worktop fitting a bit easier. I will measure again carefully, in case I can fit the 1" stuff in. Christian. |
#11
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 13:19:08 +0000, Parish wrote:
Christian McArdle wrote: Is there any way you could fit a wall bolted, 'triangular' shaped, steel brace in the middle or do you need an uncluttered space? I'd need to drill a very big hole through the washing machine to accommodate the brace. It might prevent the drum rotating, too. Hmmm, I take it we are talking about this layout, from your thread "Granite worktop span"? ++----+----++----+---+----+---+---+ || WM | TD || DW | +----+ | | || | || | 1 |SINK| 2 | 3 | ++----+----++----+---+ +---+---+ Support profile: ^^ 1.2m ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ You need a support 'twixt the WM and TD, yes? How about this (which is what I thought Tim meant but, judging by his reaction to your reply, it wasn't) fabricate a "shelf bracket" from angle iron and flat strip, it only needs to be 3mm thick steel, screw it _solidly_ to the wall at the back of the worktop. [T] Hi Parish, it was exactly what I had in mind for the middle of the span but it turns out there is no space for such? I think Christian is going to use the surrounding gear for the xbeam support at either end? It will be more than strong enough. All you need is 3mm of space between the WM and TD, surely you must have that? I couldn't draw it in ASCII art, so here's a quick CAD drawing of what I mean. http://users.uk.freebsd.org/~mark/support.png [T] The flat strip brace is fine where you have to sneak the bracket into a thin gap. If it was 3mm thick and as wide as your drawing suggests it shouldn't buckle under compression ;-) All the best .. T i m |
#12
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 13:36:02 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: I have some lengths of 50mm x 25mm x 1.5mm thick seam welded steel box left over from when I built the garage doors. It's pretty stiff (unlike angle) and probably stiffer than the support the cupboards can provide? 25mm is, perhaps, a little too much, but pretty close. Although the instructions call for 40mm wooden beam across the front, I am hoping that doing several structs of metal 20mm will provide enough support. I assume you wouldn't be able to take the box section along the entire length of the worktop (this would provide more support?) No. The next item is the dishwasher, which must be flush against the worktop, unlike the washing machine and tumble dryer, which have the facility to bolt the doors artificially high to cover the gap. Between the dishwasher and tumble dryer is a stud framework with a pretty column pillar on the front. The studwork is made of 47mm x 75mm softwood, so should provide enough support for the metal lintels. I was planning to channel out about 30mm for the lintel footings with a router. [T] Ah, I see .. the reaon for the extended x bar is that it would be supported by the box that is being held down by the granite eith side of the span and helping to make the who lot 'stiffer' ? All the best .. T i m p.s. I also have some (I think) 25 x 25 square box (like the Speedframe stuff used for knock together workbenches) or some 20 x 15 x 1.5mm ? Will they take 5m lengths in the post? All the best .. T i m |
#13
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[T] Ah, I see .. the reaon for the extended x bar is that it would be
supported by the box that is being held down by the granite eith side of the span and helping to make the who lot 'stiffer' ? Yes, I can see that would improve matters considerably. Unfortunately, the dishwasher simply has to be next. Otherwise, the dishwasher would be next to the Belfast sink, giving a stainless steel side slightly on display and nothing to support the end of the granite section. p.s. I also have some (I think) 25 x 25 square box (like the Speedframe stuff used for knock together workbenches) or some 20 x 15 x 1.5mm ? Will they take 5m lengths in the post? Hmmm. Approximately where in the country are you? Christian. |
#14
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Christian McArdle wrote:
So 20mm high will be enough to stop the Granite cracking when the uninitiated decide to sit on the worktop? How many should I put across? I was thinking of one near the front and one in the middle. The rear will be held by some 2x3 softwood bolted to the wall. Remind me - what's the span? I should just squeeze 20mm in. I've got around 45mm absolute tops to play with. 40mm would be safer, making it easier to insert/retract appliances and less likely to end in tears. I can't lift the worktop another mm without serious issues elsewhere. I've got to get the beam, slate, tile adhesive and sealant in there then. I've already got the 12mm ply down, so don't need to account for that. That gives: Adhesive 3mm Slate 12mm Beam 20mm Sealant 5mm That gives me exactly 40mm, so it should be OK, provided I spread adhesive carefully. I take it I can just run a thick bed of sealant and let it dry? I don't think I want to glue the granite down? Is there a more suitable material for this anyway, such as laying thin MDF/hardboard over the entire space? I wouldn't worry about gluing the granite down - it'll peel off easily enough. -- Grunff |
#15
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[T] The flat strip brace is fine where you have to sneak the bracket
into a thin gap. If it was 3mm thick and as wide as your drawing suggests it shouldn't buckle under compression ;-) I think I misread the original idea slightly, thinking of the bracket coming from another angle. The main problem with this solution is that it is next to impossible to wiggle the washing machine in and out directly without borrowing the space from the adjacent tumble dryer, which is itself so light it pushes in and out with ease, giving the washing machine some room for manoevure. If it is the only way to provide enough strength, then maybe I'll have to do it, though, and pay for washing machine repair men to overcome the installation/removal issues! Do you think that 3 spans of 19mm box section would not be sufficient support? If not, would the 25mm push it into acceptable territoriy? i.e. +----------------------------- +-+-----------------------+-+- | | | | |###########################| | | | | |###########################| | | | | |###########################| +-+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-+ +----+ +----+ = 47mm wide, 75mm tall softwood ###### = 19mm box section stainless steel ~~~~~~ = decorative edged chipboard trim Entire area inside of the softwood covered in thin MDF, flush with softwood surface. Christian. |
#16
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Remind me - what's the span?
121 cm. Back edge and sides well supported. Christian. |
#17
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Christian McArdle wrote:
Remind me - what's the span? 121 cm. Back edge and sides well supported. Then 20mm x40mm with 3mm wall will be fine - use 2 lengths - front and middle. -- Grunff |
#18
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Christian McArdle wrote:
[T] The flat strip brace is fine where you have to sneak the bracket into a thin gap. If it was 3mm thick and as wide as your drawing suggests it shouldn't buckle under compression ;-) I think I misread the original idea slightly, thinking of the bracket coming from another angle. The main problem with this solution is that it is next to impossible to wiggle the washing machine in and out directly without borrowing the space from the adjacent tumble dryer, which is itself so light it pushes in and out with ease, giving the washing machine some room for manoevure. If it is the only way to provide enough strength, then maybe I'll have to do it, though, and pay for washing machine repair men to overcome the installation/removal issues! How often are you likely to need to pull the washing machine out? Not very I expect. If you were to fix a brace like this with the angle iron flanges on the TD side you could pull the TD out and remove the brace, then put it back after the WM has been repaired/replaced. surely the granite only needs supporting in case someone sits on it? It should support it's own weight easily over a 1200mm span? The advantage of a brace like that is that you can make it as deep as you need to and making it totally rigid (for any conceivable load it's likely to be subjected to) would not present a problem. Regards, Parish Do you think that 3 spans of 19mm box section would not be sufficient support? If not, would the 25mm push it into acceptable territoriy? i.e. +----------------------------- +-+-----------------------+-+- | | | | |###########################| | | | | |###########################| | | | | |###########################| +-+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-+ +----+ +----+ = 47mm wide, 75mm tall softwood ###### = 19mm box section stainless steel ~~~~~~ = decorative edged chipboard trim Entire area inside of the softwood covered in thin MDF, flush with softwood surface. Christian. |
#19
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121 cm. Back edge and sides well supported.
Then 20mm x40mm with 3mm wall will be fine - use 2 lengths - front and middle. Obviously the 20mm is in the important vertical direction. Also, the metal companies seem keen of "16" gauge, which they suggest is 1.5mm, rather than 3mm. Is this well underspecced? Does anyone publish formulae? Christian. |
#20
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Christian McArdle wrote:
121 cm. Back edge and sides well supported. Then 20mm x40mm with 3mm wall will be fine - use 2 lengths - front and middle. Obviously the 20mm is in the important vertical direction. I gathered that from your limited space. Also, the metal companies seem keen of "16" gauge, which they suggest is 1.5mm, rather than 3mm. Is this well underspecced? Does anyone publish formulae? I wouldn't use 1.5mm wall for this. I think you'll find it difficult to get a calculation on this - because what you're aiming for is as close to zero deflection as possible. This isn't normally calculated for. There has to be a certain amount of gut feel/experience here. If you play around with some box section, you'll soon see what I mean. 3mm walled box is easy to get hold of. -- Grunff |
#21
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3mm walled box is easy to get hold of.
Do you know where from? The supplier I've found won't do anything smaller than 40mm x 40mm in 3mm. I can get 20mm x 20mm with 2mm wall, but not rectangular box sections, only square. Everything else only comes in 1.5mm or 1mm. Christian. |
#22
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 14:31:35 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: The main problem with this solution is that it is next to impossible to wiggle the washing machine in and out directly without borrowing the space from the adjacent tumble dryer, which is itself so light it pushes in and out with ease, giving the washing machine some room for manoevure. [T] Gotcha .. If it is the only way to provide enough strength, then maybe I'll have to do it, though, and pay for washing machine repair men to overcome the installation/removal issues! [T] It's not 'strength' but 'stiffness' you need here though isn't it. I think 3 spans would be sufficient as the rear and sides are solid. I might put two near the front (where there is least supoport now) and one down the middle. Do you think that 3 spans of 19mm box section would not be sufficient support? If not, would the 25mm push it into acceptable territoriy? [T] I think the 'stiffness' goes up exponentially with the box dimensions (that a guess not a scientific comment) so go as large as you can. I'm pretty sure the tube wall thickness on my tandem cycle is pretty thin and that takes all 16 st of me, and my not-ever-so-light missus ok and without too much flex. (you need some in a cycle) ;-) All the best .. T i m (Nth London) |
#23
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3mm walled box is easy to get hold of.
Also, what about aluminium? Is it much weaker than steel? It seems to available in suitable sizes as solid bar or box sections. Not sure on price, though. Christian. |
#24
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Christian McArdle wrote:
3mm walled box is easy to get hold of. Also, what about aluminium? Is it much weaker than steel? It seems to available in suitable sizes as solid bar or box sections. Not sure on price, though. If you went for aluminium you'd need solid bar to match the stiffness. And it would cost *a lot* more. -- Grunff |
#25
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Christian McArdle wrote:
3mm walled box is easy to get hold of. Do you know where from? I have a place up the road that sells it - but delivery will be costly. Look in yell for steel stockholders. There's bound to be one near you who can supply. -- Grunff |
#26
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[T] It's not 'strength' but 'stiffness' you need here though isn't it.
I think 3 spans would be sufficient as the rear and sides are solid. I might put two near the front (where there is least supoport now) and one down the middle. Yes, that sounds sensible. Do you think that 3 spans of 19mm box section would not be sufficient support? If not, would the 25mm push it into acceptable territoriy? [T] I think the 'stiffness' goes up exponentially with the box dimensions (that a guess not a scientific comment) so go as large as you can. Well, I'll try to get the 25mm in, although I can't be sure it will fit. It would just be a case of deciding on a suitable really thin soft material to lay over the top. Do you think a bead of dry sealant will be enough to prevent the granite smashing due to the hardness? Christian. |
#27
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 15:36:53 -0000, "Christian McArdle"
wrote: Well, I'll try to get the 25mm in, although I can't be sure it will fit. [T] Lookat at a previous post 25mm sq would be ok? It would just be a case of deciding on a suitable really thin soft material to lay over the top. Do you think a bead of dry sealant will be enough to prevent the granite smashing due to the hardness? [T] For me the 'problem' with a dry sealant is the difficulty you would have getting a uniform thickmess? I would fix all the things that were going to be fixed and then run a strip of 1mm x 12mm double sided foam tape) around all the load bearing edges of the things resting on the steel box, the wall plate, the cabinet edges etc to absorb any movement etc? If they also need to be waterproofed / sealed then add yer sealant afterwards .. All the best .. T i m |
#28
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![]() Christian McArdle wrote in message ... Well, I've got a quote of 40 quid for enough 3/4" x 3/4" 16 gauge to span 3 times. That, I believe means 19mm x 19mm @ 1.5mm thick. Hopefully, this will be stiff enough to stop the Granite cracking. If you pack the centre of the steel box section with a small gravel/sand/cement concrete mix, you will find that the stiffness is substantially increased. It's probably equivalent to a 3" thick granite slab. I'd pack the gap between the steel box and the granite with something like Unibond stone repair( sets like rock, 10 minutes max working life), to ensure that the granite could not flex relative to the steel. Regards Capitol |
#29
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 20:53:52 -0000, "Capitol"
wrote: Christian McArdle wrote in message ... Well, I've got a quote of 40 quid for enough 3/4" x 3/4" 16 gauge to span 3 times. That, I believe means 19mm x 19mm @ 1.5mm thick. Hopefully, this will be stiff enough to stop the Granite cracking. If you pack the centre of the steel box section with a small gravel/sand/cement concrete mix, you will find that the stiffness is substantially increased. It's probably equivalent to a 3" thick granite slab. I'd pack the gap between the steel box and the granite with something like Unibond stone repair( sets like rock, 10 minutes max working life), to ensure that the granite could not flex relative to the steel. Are you sure about that? Granite is not going to flex at all, so fixing it with an adhesive that has no give to something that might but shouldn't doesn't seem intuitively right to me. ..andy To email, substitute .nospam with .gl |
#30
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![]() "Christian McArdle" wrote in message . net... In this episode of my granite fitting saga, it appears that there won't be enough room for the 40mm wooden beam across the twin appliance gap to support the granite. What width steel box section would have the same bending resistance as the 40mm wood specified? Also, can granite rest directly on the metal, or should there be a soft material on top, such as hardboard? Christian. If you're having difficulty sourcing the box section, what about a few runs of angle iron to support? With a suitable facing if any of it is on show, of course.... -- Richard Sampson email me at richard at olifant d-ot co do-t uk |
#31
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In article , Andy Hall
wrote: Are you sure about that? Granite is not going to flex at all, so fixing it with an adhesive that has no give to something that might but shouldn't doesn't seem intuitively right to me. If it doesn't flex at all then the steel is redundant as it must deflect by some (minuscule) amount if it is carrying a proportion of the load. If the granite just bears on the steel you'll have a load sharing situation. If you fix the steel to the granite with epoxy or whatever and put weight on the granite it will be in compression and the steel in tension like a RC beam. -- Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk Free SEDBUK boiler database browser http://www.sda.co.uk/qsedbuk.htm |
#32
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 11:39:34 GMT, Tony Bryer
wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: Are you sure about that? Granite is not going to flex at all, so fixing it with an adhesive that has no give to something that might but shouldn't doesn't seem intuitively right to me. If it doesn't flex at all then the steel is redundant as it must deflect by some (minuscule) amount if it is carrying a proportion of the load. If the granite just bears on the steel you'll have a load sharing situation. If you fix the steel to the granite with epoxy or whatever and put weight on the granite it will be in compression and the steel in tension like a RC beam. Makes sense. Since the steel, I would have thought would flex rather more than the granite, I would expect that the granite would crack. Unless I've missed something? ..andy To email, substitute .nospam with .gl |
#33
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"Andy Hall" wrote in message
... On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 11:39:34 GMT, Tony Bryer wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: Are you sure about that? Granite is not going to flex at all, so fixing it with an adhesive that has no give to something that might but shouldn't doesn't seem intuitively right to me. If it doesn't flex at all then the steel is redundant as it must deflect by some (minuscule) amount if it is carrying a proportion of the load. If the granite just bears on the steel you'll have a load sharing situation. If you fix the steel to the granite with epoxy or whatever and put weight on the granite it will be in compression and the steel in tension like a RC beam. Makes sense. Since the steel, I would have thought would flex rather more than the granite, I would expect that the granite would crack. Unless I've missed something? yes, I think you've missed something in this. The granite will break not because of the compression it suffers at the top but due to it's weak tensile strength on the underside. If you bond steel section firmly to the underside it gives the granite the required tensile strength and therefore prevents the breakage. The alternative is to provide a firm inflexible support for the granite and not bond it securely. You limit the amount that the granite can deflect and hence the maximum tension that it will suffer underneath. This would mean that any flexible bedding or sealant used between steel and granite must be as thin as possible, because this would allow slight movement. One thought that does strike me relates to the expansion of the steel with heat and whether the firmly bonded solution would be problematic in this instance. Might the heat kicked out from the WM and TD be sufficient to cause problems with this? (thinking aloud here, the granite ought to provide a good thermal sink thus preventing the steel from heating up and therefore expanding too much). -- Richard Sampson email me at richard at olifant d-ot co do-t uk |
#34
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 13:58:38 -0000, "RichardS" noaccess@invalid
wrote: "Andy Hall" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 11:39:34 GMT, Tony Bryer wrote: In article , Andy Hall wrote: Are you sure about that? Granite is not going to flex at all, so fixing it with an adhesive that has no give to something that might but shouldn't doesn't seem intuitively right to me. If it doesn't flex at all then the steel is redundant as it must deflect by some (minuscule) amount if it is carrying a proportion of the load. If the granite just bears on the steel you'll have a load sharing situation. If you fix the steel to the granite with epoxy or whatever and put weight on the granite it will be in compression and the steel in tension like a RC beam. Makes sense. Since the steel, I would have thought would flex rather more than the granite, I would expect that the granite would crack. Unless I've missed something? yes, I think you've missed something in this. The granite will break not because of the compression it suffers at the top but due to it's weak tensile strength on the underside. If you bond steel section firmly to the underside it gives the granite the required tensile strength and therefore prevents the breakage. The alternative is to provide a firm inflexible support for the granite and not bond it securely. You limit the amount that the granite can deflect and hence the maximum tension that it will suffer underneath. This would mean that any flexible bedding or sealant used between steel and granite must be as thin as possible, because this would allow slight movement. I see what you're saying. One thought that does strike me relates to the expansion of the steel with heat and whether the firmly bonded solution would be problematic in this instance. Might the heat kicked out from the WM and TD be sufficient to cause problems with this? (thinking aloud here, the granite ought to provide a good thermal sink thus preventing the steel from heating up and therefore expanding too much). So it seems that the conclusion is not completely clear - one can argue either way ..andy To email, substitute .nospam with .gl |
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![]() Andy Hall wrote in message Unless I've missed something? Yes, filling the steel section with concrete gives you a reinforced concrete lintel, just turned inside out! As I said, to get the optimum effect, the granite needs to be bonded to the "concrete lintel" which corresponds to about a 3" thickness of granite IMO. Regards Capitol |
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