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    [Poll] - engineer this table

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Corner Bar
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    • jeff hammondJ Offline
      jeff hammond
      last edited by

      @pbacot said:

      Curious in your drawing, I don't understand what is the gold versus blue component?

      the actual color is just 'color by layer' and isn't meant as a material/texture representation.

      but the blue is 3/4" melamine sheets.. the gold is the form boards for the sides..
      basically, everything in the drawing aside from the steel will be removed once dried.. or- when finished, you won't see any of the stuff in the drawing.. you'll only see stuff that isn't in the drawing 😄 (concrete)

      @unknownuser said:

      I would think there needs to be some steel tie from each post cross wise in the table top, either in the rebar welded to the post or a plate, for torsion in the long axis. Some of this is resisted by the curved placement of posts. If someone sits on the corner is there a lot of tension in concrete at the top of the post?

      that's my main concern as well.. structurally, i'd like to place vertical supports at the corners but people's legs need to be able to freely move in/out of the there so that's why the posts are in the middle..

      but yeah, concrete can handle the torsion/twisting forces which will be happening in those areas.. problem is, i don't know exactly how much nor do i know how to calculate those forces..

      i did consider something like so but it's generally not good practice to triple+ stack rebar which would happen if i used the same layout.. (especially when considering the top is 2.5" thick and each layer of rebar is 3/8")

      Screen%20Shot%202014-04-17%20at%201.02.17%20AM.jpg

      i'm also looking into GFRC (glass fiber reinforced) which, as i understand, has great flexural strength and in many instances, eliminates the need for steel. (though i'd still use steel in combination with the fiber)

      dotdotdot

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      • C Offline
        Charlie__V
        last edited by

        Jeff,
        Just spitballing here........what if you router out your bottom form for a ¼" steel plate.(finishes flush to bottom of conc.) Also weld the plate to the sched. 40 steel pipe.
        (see my crude image below) 😳

        And I'm curious...were you going to fill the sched. 40 with conc. as well?

        C


        qrtinchplate.jpg

        Precision M1710/Win 7 Pro 64 bit/i-7 6920 Quad core 2.9 Ghz -3.8/16Gb ram/NVIDIA M5000M 8Gb

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        • jeff hammondJ Offline
          jeff hammond
          last edited by

          hmm. that would work as a means to get more support in those area.. you wouldn't have to rout a recess in the form.. just place it on top of the form then it will be flush with the bottom of the concrete.. it would also double as a cap for the pipe (as in- those pipe holes will be covered and I'm not pouring inside of them.. so it would just be drilling the four flange holes into the steel plate..

          thing is, I'd rather not if it's not necessary. or-- it still doesn't make me 100% confident.
          meh, maybe I'll just talk($) to an engineer about it.
          😕

          dotdotdot

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          • mitcorbM Offline
            mitcorb
            last edited by

            Hmmm. You need a friendgineer. 💚 Can't believe it would be that expensive.

            I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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            • jeff hammondJ Offline
              jeff hammond
              last edited by

              @mitcorb said:

              Hmmm. You need a friendgineer. 💚 Can't believe it would be that expensive.

              heh.. i have one of them and he'd probably have a look for no charge.. thing is, he's not in the 'immediate' circle of friends so i don't want to waste a possible favor with this table..
              but yeah, i'll just show it to a local engr.. surely won't be more than a couple hundred.

              dotdotdot

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              • BoxB Offline
                Box
                last edited by

                I haven't looked at it carefully, but have you considered other materials. Good ply and nice edge trim, light and easily replaced.
                Or fibreglass, simple fabrication, durable, light etc etc
                Epoxy casting, bloody expensive but wonderful finish.

                I think my point could be that it depends what the full end use is. Are you making one or 300? Is tooling up cost effective etcetc

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                • jeff hammondJ Offline
                  jeff hammond
                  last edited by

                  @box said:

                  I haven't looked at it carefully, but have you considered other materials. Good ply and nice edge trim, light and easily replaced.
                  Or fibreglass, simple fabrication, durable, light etc etc
                  Epoxy casting, bloody expensive but wonderful finish.

                  I think my point could be that it depends what the full end use is. Are you making one or 300? Is tooling up cost effective etcetc

                  first thought was wood since i'm a woodworker.. (and this is still, basically, a wood project.. the form work is what will require the most skill).. i already have the necessary tools to build this.. concrete or rebar isn't that expensive..
                  the most expensive thing in the design are the flanges/threaded uprights and i'd have those subbed out. (~ $50 per flange / $50 per upright)..

                  but that stuff aside, i'd still be up against the same sort of issues if i just took the same shape and made it of a different material.

                  i'm making a total of 4 different pieces.. a bar and 3 tables.. none are the same shape and the forms will be trashed (about $500 in form material)

                  dotdotdot

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                  • BoxB Offline
                    Box
                    last edited by

                    Yeah all of that fits, I know you are a wood man which is why I don't understand the concrete. Why make a negative wood former to caste when you could make a fantastic laminated wood positive.

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                    • jeff hammondJ Offline
                      jeff hammond
                      last edited by

                      boredom ? 😄

                      (oh, and I mentioned concrete at one of the meetings and they loved it.. basically, at this point, they're buying concrete tables/bar top)

                      dotdotdot

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                      • daleD Offline
                        dale
                        last edited by

                        I love and use concrete a lot, and have built a lot of countertops over the years, and I wouldn't hesitate to build it as you have it designed.
                        Attached is a test done on Glass Fiber Reinforced concrete with no rebar, and it resists 1100 lbs befor breaking, so with rebar as per your design..... no problem

                        But if you really want to have some fun you should get into Fabric Cast Concrete.


                        Screenshot 2014-04-18 at 7.02.06 AM.png

                        Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                        • BoxB Offline
                          Box
                          last edited by

                          Boredom in my book is written on the door to god's waiting room. If you want to make it make well for everything else there is IKEA

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                          • A Offline
                            AirWindSolar
                            last edited by

                            @jeff hammond said:

                            • high volume cafe/coffee house..
                            • one of those "i don't know - what do you want to build?" setups
                            • i want to build this

                            From an ergonomic (and potentially ADA) standpoint, long benches suck for folks with knee and/or hip injuries, since being anywhere other than the end basically means they're trapped in there until everybody else moves.

                            Then again, cramped and uncomfortable is the in thing for coffee shops these days.

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                            • F Offline
                              Futurepast
                              last edited by

                              @airwindsolar said:

                              @jeff hammond said:

                              • high volume cafe/coffee house..
                              • one of those "i don't know - what do you want to build?" setups
                              • i want to build this

                              From an ergonomic (and potentially ADA) standpoint, long benches suck for folks with knee and/or hip injuries, since being anywhere other than the end basically means they're trapped in there until everybody else moves.

                              Then again, cramped and uncomfortable is the in thing for coffee shops these days.

                              That's so people don't stay too long!!! NEXT CUSTOMER PLEASE!!!!!!!!

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                              • jeff hammondJ Offline
                                jeff hammond
                                last edited by

                                @airwindsolar said:

                                From an ergonomic (and potentially ADA) standpoint, long benches suck for folks with knee and/or hip injuries, since being anywhere other than the end basically means they're trapped in there until everybody else moves.

                                Then again, cramped and uncomfortable is the in thing for coffee shops these days.

                                comfort? this is brooklyn-- we only care about how many people we can cram into one spot 😉 (i kid, i kid)

                                but yeah, some of what you're saying was discussed already and if you saw the whole design, i think this actual table would make more sense.. as per a client request, this table is communal seating.. there are also some tables which are easier in/out and more 'private' (as well as a few standup/chair_less tables).. then one wall table with stools.

                                as i imagine it happening at least-- the two ends of this table will be occupied first and will be the most used areas.. when it's busy though, people will be able to sit in the middle without asking the people on the ends to move..

                                @dale said:

                                I love and use concrete a lot, and have built a lot of countertops over the years, and I wouldn't hesitate to build it as you have it designed.
                                Attached is a test done on Glass Fiber Reinforced concrete with no rebar, and it resists 1100 lbs befor breaking, so with rebar as per your design..... no problem

                                But if you really want to have some fun you should get into Fabric Cast Concrete.

                                thanks for your thoughts Dale.
                                i remember you posted something about the fabric casting a couple of years ago.. i'm hyped on the stuff and hope to find a use for it one day..

                                i saw that video last night and found it impressive.. the spans/overhangs i have are less than the spans in the video so this table should be able to resist more weight than they've done.. not to mention this design has rebar in it as well.. to be honest, i'm now confident these spans won't break under normal condidtion- not even close.. my main concern now is the balancing or wether or not it will topple.. i'm just going to do a mock up and test it like that-- if it topples, i'll be able to make a tighter radius which should provide more stability..

                                here's a bench design i came across last night and to me, that's a lot more stress than what my design is calling for.. this bench is using the same #3 rebar and the cantilever is the same thickness (2.5").. if this thing holds up, my design definitely will.

                                concrete_bench.jpg

                                drawing.jpg

                                i found quite a few objects which were similar in size/material with sections of it being under greater stresses than what i'm planning.. i think the one i've drawn will be o.k.

                                dotdotdot

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                                • jeff hammondJ Offline
                                  jeff hammond
                                  last edited by

                                  @futurepast said:

                                  That's so people don't stay too long!!! NEXT CUSTOMER PLEASE!!!!!!!!

                                  haha.. right.
                                  the client didn't want booths.. she wants benches 😉

                                  @box said:

                                  Boredom in my book is written on the door to god's waiting room. If you want to make it make well for everything else there is IKEA

                                  boredom is the wrong word.. (well, it's the right word in my head but i'm not using the right definition for it)..

                                  more along the lines of-- for whatever reason, this concrete/steel idea is exciting to me and i look forward to building it..
                                  as long as i have that aspect going for me in a project, the project becomes fun and more easy..

                                  if i'm not excited to do it and i'm strictly working for the money, it becomes such a drag and the days feel twice as long..

                                  something like that.

                                  dotdotdot

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                                  • BoxB Offline
                                    Box
                                    last edited by

                                    Ok then, can you add a "I really don't give a shit" Icon. So we don't expend any energy on the answers we give.

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                                    • jeff hammondJ Offline
                                      jeff hammond
                                      last edited by

                                      @box said:

                                      Ok then, can you add a "I really don't give a shit" Icon. So we don't expend any energy on the answers we give.

                                      rich would have to do that.. 😉

                                      fact is, i do give a shit.. lots of what is being said has already been discussed/thought through so my responses are filling in the background info.

                                      the stuff that i haven't discussed or thought through is the maths / forces which are happening here.. in fact, i don't even know how to do that..

                                      it will be sweet when we get the ability to do this stuff in user friendly_ish programs.. basically, in this case, assign the material then turn on gravity.. apply side force.. have susan and sang jump on top.. etc..
                                      ie- Engineering for Everyone!! 😄

                                      dotdotdot

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                                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                                        jeff hammond
                                        last edited by

                                        .

                                        went with the 80%

                                        pouring tomorrow

                                        photo copy.JPG

                                        dotdotdot

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                                        • cottyC Offline
                                          cotty
                                          last edited by

                                          Nice update!

                                          my SketchUp gallery

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                                          • D Offline
                                            DOD3R
                                            last edited by

                                            looking good.
                                            I am curios how will you do round corners.

                                            good luck

                                            D.

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