4.1
Direct securing in the longitudinal direction with belts and timber blocking
This example is intended to demonstrate
the incorrect assessment which may be made of a cargo securing arrangement when
using the conventional calculation method where securing devices with different
spring constants are loaded in parallel. Considering the cargo movement may reveal
the error.
A heavy cargo unit is secured against
sliding in the transverse direction with transverse, criss-crossed chains and
against sliding in the longitudinal direction with longitudinal criss-crossed
belts. The securing arrangement is largely symmetrical. Due to the greater
requirement for securing against forward sliding, blocking against the end wall
of the loading area with two pieces of squared timber is additionally provided.
The two lengthwise wooden shores press against transverse pieces of squared
timber of identical cross section. The cargo unit itself stands on flat wooden
boards.
Figure
17: Securing a heavy item against forward sliding
This example solely investigates securing
against forward sliding. At best, the chains contribute to securing in the
longitudinal direction by their pretension which increases friction. However,
since they are only pulled "hand tight", this is not taken into
account.
Cargo mass m = 18 t, dimensions l x b x h = 5,0 x 2,4 x
1,9 m, m = 0,3
4 belts lengthwise: | X = 4,9 m, Y = 0,0 m, Z = 1,8 m; L = 5,22 m
|
| LC = 25 kN, elongation at LC = 4,5%, pretension F0 = 2,5 kN |
2 lengthwise wooden shores: | Cross-section 9,6 x 9,6 cm, LC = 2 × 92 kN, L = 2,2 m
|
2 wooden crosspieces: | Cross-section 9,6 x 9,6 cm, LC = 2 × 27,65 kN
|
The external force is determined as
conventionally agreed.
FX = cx × m ×
g = 0,8 × 18 × 9,81 = 141,3 kN
Conventional assessment of the securing against forward sliding:
According to the conventional assessment,
this securing exceeds requirements by a good 13%, if, as conventional, the load
LC is used for each securing device..
Taking account of cargo shifting:
In the present case, the blocking is
clearly the more rigid securing device. Using the previously described
selective method, the distance by which the cargo has shifted forward when the
blocking has reached the LC of 55.3 kN is first calculated. The spring constant
of the blocking is required for this purpose.
The blocking consists of two parallel
lengthwise wooden members, each 2.2 m in length, with two serial wooden
crosspieces, each 9.6 cm in thickness. The modulus of elasticity is 1100 kN/cm2
when loaded lengthwise and 100 kN/cm2 when loaded perpendicular to
the grain. The following spring constants are thus obtained:
Lengthwise wooden member: | DL = A × E / L = 9,62 × 1100 / 2,2 = 46080 kN/m |
2 wooden crosspieces: | DQ = A × E / L = 9,62 × 100 / 0,192 = 48000 kN/m |
Arranged in series, the following value
is obtained for one wooden member, D = D1 × D2 /(D1
+ D2) = 23510 kN/m, the value for both of the wooden members being
twice that, or 47020 kN/m. This results in the cargo shifting by DL = DF / D = 55.3 /
47020 = 0.0012 m = 1.2 mm. Since the wooden members are placed horizontally,
this is also the offset DX of the cargo unit.
As a result of the offset DX, the rearward
pointing belts are extended by the amount
The spring constant
of the belts amounts to DG = DF / DL = 25 / (5.22 × 0.045) = 106 kN/m. As a
result of the elongation by 0.0011 m, the rearward pointing belts increase
their tensile force by DF = DG × DL = 106 × 0.0011 = 0.117 kN from 2.5 to 2.617 kN. The
forward pointing belts reduce their tensile force by the same amount from 2.5
to 2.383 kN. They thus still pull forward and assist the longitudinal force FX.
Both values are inserted into a balance:
The balance is not at
equilibrium. The shortfall is a good 22%. In the stated load case, the blocking
would be overloaded and could even reach the critical buckling load. By way of
remedy, it is proposed to construct the blocking with four instead of two
lengthwise wooden members, so that they can alone provide forward securing
together with the friction.
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