staircase design report

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Design Project 1 Ryland Ballingham Ryan Rampolla Group 44 9/25/15 Dr.Griffis

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Design Project 1

Ryland Ballingham

Ryan Rampolla

Group 44

9/25/15

Dr.Griffis

Contents Need .............................................................................................................................................................. 3

Specs ............................................................................................................................................................. 3

Concepts ....................................................................................................................................................... 4

Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 4

How it works ............................................................................................................................................. 6

Features .................................................................................................................................................... 6

Analysis & Optimization ................................................................................................................................ 7

Evaluation ................................................................................................................................................... 22

References .................................................................................................................................................. 22

Need Preliminary Need:

There is a need for easy access between two floors within a household.

Design Considerations:

1. Safety

2. Standards and building codes

3. Load rating

4. Overall size

5. Stress conditions (nominal worst case)

6. Overall Factor of Safety

7. Ease of use

8. Material choice

9. Ease of manufacture

10. Shape and size (geometry)

Specs Performance Specs

1. Capacity (max weight of user): 300 lbf at the center of the step

2. Constraint imposed:

a. 270ยฐ sweep for garden

3. Staircase Code:

a. Overall height: 10ft

b. Minimum step length: 26in

c. Maximum rise between steps: 9.5 in

d. Each tread having a 7.5 inch minimum tread depth at12 inches from

the narrower edge.

e. Minimum headroom of 6โ€™6โ€™โ€™

Concepts

Introduction

The design concept is a fairly simple design composing of 12 steps constructed out of

steel with a rise on 9.5 in. Each step in the concept had on overall step length of 26 in and

a tread depth of 8.04 in at a distance of 12 in from the narrower edge. The overall

assembly is broken down into four parts: The steps/center pole, the under step bracket

(including two ยพโ€-10 fasteners), the supporting pipe and the pole bracket (including two

ยพโ€-10 fasteners). The center pole diameter is 6 in

step

Support pipe

Pipe to pole

bracket

Center pole

Figure 1: Step assembly

Figure 2: Bracket Assembly

Figure 3: Step assembly exploded

ยพโ€-16 bolts

ยพโ€-10 bolts

ยพโ€-16

nuts

ยพโ€-10 nuts

Under step

bracket

How it works

Each step is supported at the line of action of the applied nominal force of 300 lbf by a

bracket using two ยพโ€™โ€™-10 fasteners. The bracket is welded to a 2โ€™โ€™ steel pipe with a 90ยฐ

elbow (that supports the weight of the step user) that is then welded to another bracket

(that supports the bending moment created by the step user). This bracket attaches the

entire step assembly to the 6โ€ diameter center pole by use of two ยพโ€™โ€™-10. There is 12

steps total.

Features

Due to the pre-welding performed by the manufacturer, using this design installing each

step is as easy as attaching the under step bracket to each step using two provided

fasteners and then attaching the pole bracket to the center pole using the two provided

fasteners. Also, the all steel construction is very durable.

Figure 4: Isometric view of

staircase

Figure 5: Front view of staircase

Analysis & Optimization

The purpose of the following analysis is to determine whether or not our design will

support the given nominal load of 300 lbf. With a factor of safety of n > 1. The line of

action of the applied nominal load will act in the middle of the step (half the distance to

the step edge.

In the following, the staircase is going to be analyzed using free body diagrams. Free

body diagrams will allow us to solve for unknown reaction forces, moments, bolt forces,

weld stresses that will occur at these critical locations. This will allow us to ensure that

we have created a safe and reliable design. We will choose two critical locations to

analyze, the weld that connects the pipe to the pole mounting bracket and the weld right

before the elbow on the pipe.

critical locations

Table 1

Location Failure concern Rational

a buckling (compressive) Weaker material, high contact stress

b tear (tensile) High bending moment , weaker material (weld)

c tear (tensile) High bending moment , weaker material (weld)

d tear (tensile) High bending moment, high shear stress, small

cross sectional area

f buckling (compressive) High contact stress, small cross-sectional area

loads on parts, free body diagrams and load verification

In the above free body diagram, we can find the resultant moment due to the

nominal load of 300 lbf by performing the following.

โˆ‘ ๐น๐‘ฆ = 0

300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ โˆ’ 300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ = 0

14 in Mp

300 lbf 300 lbf

Figure 7: Free body diagram of the Step

Figure 6: critical locations

a

b c

e d

โˆ‘ ๐‘€๐‘ = 0

๐‘€๐‘ โˆ’ (14๐‘–๐‘›)(300๐‘™๐‘๐‘ ) = 0

๐‘€๐‘ = 4200 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ โˆ’ ๐‘–๐‘›

Therefore, we got a reactionary moment of 4200 lbf-in.

Next, we want to ensure that the chosen fasteners are going to be strong enough

to support our nominal load. This is done below.

โˆ‘ ๐น๐‘ฆ = 0

๐‘ƒ๐‘1 + ๐‘ƒ๐‘2 โˆ’ 300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ = 0

Assuming Pb1=Pb2

2๐‘ƒ๐‘๐‘ก = 300

๐‘ƒ๐‘1 = ๐‘ƒ๐‘2 = 150 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

The fasteners being used are ยพโ€-16 that are constructed out steel with the following properties

๐ด๐‘‘ = ๐œ‹๐‘Ÿ2 = ๐œ‹(0.375)2 = 0.4418๐‘–๐‘›2

๐ด๐‘ก = 0.3345๐‘–๐‘›2

๐ฟ๐‘‡ = 1.75๐‘–๐‘›

๐‘™๐‘‘ = 1.75๐‘–๐‘›

๐ฟ = 2.25๐‘–๐‘›

Pbt=Pb1+Pb2

300 lbf

Figure 8: Free body diagram of pipe to step bracket

๐‘™๐‘ก = ๐‘™ โˆ’ ๐‘™๐‘‘ = 0.75๐‘–๐‘›

๐ธ = 30 ๐‘€๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

First, we found the member stiffness constant ๐พ๐‘š

๐พ๐‘š =0.5774๐œ‹๐ธ๐‘‘

2ln (5(0.5774๐‘™ + 0.5๐‘‘)0.5774๐‘™ + 2.5๐‘‘

๐พ๐‘š =0.5774๐œ‹(30๐‘€๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.75๐‘–๐‘›)

2ln (5(0.5774(1.25๐‘–๐‘›) + 0.5(0.75๐‘–๐‘›))0.5774(1.25๐‘–๐‘›) + 2.5(0.75๐‘–๐‘›)

๐พ๐‘š = 27.30 ๐‘€๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐‘–๐‘›โ„

Next, we found the bolt stiffness constant ๐พ๐‘

๐พ๐‘ = ๐ด๐‘‘๐ด๐‘ก๐ธ

๐ด๐‘‘๐‘™๐‘ก + ๐ด๐‘ก๐‘™๐‘‘

๐พ๐‘ = (0.442๐‘–๐‘›)(0.373๐‘–๐‘›)(30๐‘€๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)

(0.373๐‘–๐‘›)(0.75๐‘–๐‘›) + (0.373๐‘–๐‘›2)(0.5๐‘–๐‘›)

๐พ๐‘ = 9.55 ๐‘€๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐‘–๐‘›โ„

Then we found the joint stiffness constant C

๐ถ =๐พ๐‘

๐พ๐‘ + ๐พ๐‘š

๐ถ =9.55

๐‘€๐‘™๐‘๐‘“๐‘–๐‘›โ„

9.55 ๐‘€๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐‘–๐‘›โ„ + 27.30 ๐‘€๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐‘–๐‘›โ„

๐ถ = 0.2592

Then we calculated the desired preload ๐น๐‘– of the nut

๐น๐‘– =3

4๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก

๐น๐‘– =3

4(120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.373 ๐‘–๐‘›2)

๐น๐‘– = 33.57 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Then the fastener torque T

๐‘‡ = 0.2๐น๐‘–๐‘‘

๐‘‡ = (0.2)(33.57 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)(0.75๐‘–๐‘›)

๐‘‡ = 5.036 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ โˆ’ ๐‘–๐‘›

Then since we have 2 bolts the P value is:

๐‘ƒ =300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘ 

2 ๐‘๐‘œ๐‘™๐‘ก๐‘ 

๐‘ƒ =150 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘ 

๐‘๐‘œ๐‘™๐‘ก

From this we can calculate the bolt force ๐น๐‘

๐น๐‘ = ๐น๐‘– + ๐‘ƒ

๐น๐‘ = 33.57 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ + 0.150 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐น๐‘ = 33.72 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Then we calculated the yield factor of safety

๐‘›๐‘ =๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก

(๐ถ๐‘ƒ + ๐น๐‘–)

๐‘›๐‘ =(120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.373๐‘–๐‘›2)

(0.2592)(0.150๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“) โˆ’ (33.72๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

๐‘›๐‘ = 1.33

Since this ๐‘›๐‘>1, the fasteners are strong enough to support the 300 lbf load. Next we calculated

the load factor ๐‘›๐ฟ

๐‘›๐ฟ =๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก โˆ’ ๐น๐‘–

๐ถ๐‘ƒ

๐‘›๐ฟ = (120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.373๐‘–๐‘›2) โˆ’ (33.72 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

(0.2592)(0.150๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

๐‘›๐ฟ = 284

Finally, we calculated the joint separation factor ๐‘›๐‘œ

๐‘›๐‘œ = ๐น๐‘–

๐‘ƒ(1 โˆ’ ๐ถ)

๐‘›๐‘œ = (33.72 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

(0.150 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)(1 โˆ’ 0.2592)

๐‘›๐‘œ = 303

Since ๐‘›๐‘œ > 1 we know that the bracket and the step are not going to separate. Next we analyze

the weld that connects the supporting pipe to the pole bracket to determine whether or not the

weld is going to be strong enough for the given nominal load.

Since the pipe is in pure bending we will use the following formulas for a weld experiencing a

bending stress. ๐œโ€ฒ is the horizontal shear stress and ๐œ" is the vertical shear stress. The horizontal

shear stress is calculated using the following formula

๐œโ€ฒ =๐‘‰

๐ด

Where V is the shear force and A=1.414๐œ‹โ„Ž๐‘Ÿ (h=height of weld (0.25in), r= radius of pipe (1in)

๐œ" ๐œ"

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œ" ๐œ"

๐œโ€ฒ

V=300 lbf

Figure 9: Free body diagram of the support pipe weld c

๐œโ€ฒ =300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

1.1106๐‘–๐‘›2

๐œโ€ฒ = 270 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

To calculate the vertical shear stress, we use the following formula where M=the bending

moment, c=pipe radius and I=1.414โ„Ž๐ผ๐‘ข where h= height of the weld and ๐ผ๐‘ข = ๐œ‹๐‘Ÿ3

๐œ" =๐‘€๐‘

๐ผ

๐œ" =(4200 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘  ๐‘ฅ ๐‘–๐‘›)(1๐‘–๐‘›)

3.14159๐‘–๐‘›2

๐œ" = 1204 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

Then we calculated the magnitude of ๐œ

|๐œ| = โˆš๐‘กโ€ฒ2 + ๐œ"2

|๐œ| = โˆš2702 + 12042

|๐œ| = 1234 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

With the |๐œ| value calculated we can find the factor of safety ๐‘›๐‘  (๐‘†๐‘ฆ was found assuming we

used weld electrode E60xx )

๐‘›๐‘  = ๐‘†๐‘ฆ

๐œ=

50,000 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

1234 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–= 40.5

Since ๐‘›๐‘ >1 the weld will not fail. Next we determined whether or not the member force could

carry our nominal load (since we donโ€™t want to load the fasteners in shear).

To start off with, we assumed that both bolt forces are equivalent (๐‘ƒ๐‘3= ๐‘ƒ๐‘4

). Because of this we

found an equivalent distance of the two bolts that is equidistant from the two true bolt distances.

This was done using the following formula.

๐‘‘๐‘’ =3.125๐‘–๐‘› + 1.125๐‘–๐‘›

2= 2.125๐‘–๐‘›

After we found the equivalent bolt distance ๐‘‘๐‘’ then we summed the moments around point A

โˆ‘ ๐‘€๐ด = 0

โˆ’(14 ๐‘–๐‘›)(300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“) + (2.125๐‘–๐‘›)(๐‘ƒ๐‘๐‘ก) = 0

๐‘ƒ๐‘๐‘ก= 1976 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

Since we are assuming that ๐‘ƒ๐‘3= ๐‘ƒ๐‘4

we can divide ๐‘ƒ๐‘๐‘ก by 2

๐‘ƒ๐‘2= ๐‘ƒ๐‘2

=๐‘ƒ๐‘๐‘ก

2 ๐‘๐‘œ๐‘™๐‘ก๐‘ =

1976 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

2 ๐‘๐‘œ๐‘™๐‘ก๐‘ = 988 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

We can calculate the reaction force P caused by the bending moment created by the 300 lbf and

the two bolts by using the following formula.

๐‘ƒ =๐‘Š๐ฟ

๐‘‘๐‘’=

(300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)(14๐‘–๐‘›)

(2.125๐‘–๐‘›)= 1976 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

Figure 10: Free body diagram of the entire step assembly

Pb3

3

Pb4

1.125in

3.125in

A

300 lbf 14 in

P

Since we are trying to determine whether the bolts we chose are strong enough for the nominal

load we calculated the preload ๐น๐‘–. The value of ๐‘†๐‘ was a look up value.

๐น๐‘– =3

4๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก

๐น๐‘– =3

4(120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.373 ๐‘–๐‘›2) = 33.57 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Then we calculated the joint stiffness constant C

๐ถ =๐‘ƒ๐‘

๐‘ƒ

๐ถ =988 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

1976 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–= 0.5

Next, we calculated the force applied to the member ๐‘ƒ๐‘š

๐‘ƒ๐‘š = (1 โˆ’ ๐ถ)๐‘ƒ = (1 โˆ’ 0.5)(1976 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–) = 988 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Then we calculated the force in the member ๐น๐‘š

๐น๐‘š = ๐‘ƒ๐‘š โˆ’ ๐น๐‘– = 0.988 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ โˆ’ 30.1 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ = โˆ’29.1 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Since ๐น๐‘š < 0 we know that the member is in compression.

Next we have to see if the |๐‘Š| (0.3 klbf ) < ๐œ‡๐‘ |๐น๐‘š| because if this criteria isnโ€™t met, then the pipe

to pole bracket will fail

๐œ‡๐‘ |๐น๐‘š| = (0.25)(29.1) = 7.3 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

0.3 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ < 7.28 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

The above inequality shows the step is going to be supported by only the frictional force between

the bracket and the pole and the fasteners are only being used to clamp the two parts together and

thus experience no shear stress.

For the factors of safety we can calculate the bolt force ๐น๐‘

๐น๐‘ = ๐น๐‘– + ๐‘ƒ

๐น๐‘ = 30.1 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ + 0.150 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

๐น๐‘ = 30.65 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

Then calculated the yield factor of safety

๐‘›๐‘ =๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก

(๐ถ๐‘ƒ + ๐น๐‘–)

๐‘›๐‘ =(120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.3345๐‘–๐‘›2)

(0.5)(1.976๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)(30.1๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

๐‘›๐‘ = 1.29

Since this ๐‘›๐‘>1, the fasteners are strong enough to support the 300 lbf load. Next we calculated

the load factor ๐‘›๐ฟ

๐‘›๐ฟ =๐‘†๐‘๐ด๐‘ก โˆ’ ๐น๐‘–

๐ถ๐‘ƒ

๐‘›๐ฟ = (120 ๐‘˜๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–)(0.3345๐‘–๐‘›2 ) โˆ’ (30.1 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

(0.5)(1.976๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

๐‘›๐ฟ = 10.15

Finally, we calculated the joint separation factor ๐‘›๐‘œ

๐‘›๐‘œ = ๐น๐‘–

๐‘ƒ(1 โˆ’ ๐ถ)

๐‘›๐‘œ = (30.5 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

(0.150 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)(1 โˆ’ 0.5)

๐‘›๐‘œ = 30.5

We can calculate slip factor of safety

๐‘›๐‘  = ๐œ‡|๐น๐‘š|

|๐‘Š|=

(0.25)(29.1 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)

(0.300 ๐‘˜๐‘™๐‘๐‘“)= 24.3

Since all the factors of safety are >1 the bolts used to fasten the pipe to pole bracket will not fail.

and that the shear force within these bolts is going to equal 0.

Next we are going to analyze the weld that occurs right before the 90ยฐ elbow on the pipe. We use

the same FBD as the previous weld as only the applied bending moment changes

Figure 11: Free body diagram of the support pipe weld

h right before the 90ยฐ angle

Note: ๐œโ€ฒ = horizontal shear stress and ๐œ" = vertical shear stress

As before, this weld is experiencing pure bending. The horizontal shear stress is calculated using

the following formula

๐œโ€ฒ =๐‘‰

๐ด

Where V is the shear force and A=1.414๐œ‹โ„Ž๐‘Ÿ (h=height of weld (0.25in), r= radius of pipe (1in)

๐œโ€ฒ =300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“

1.1106๐‘–๐‘›2

๐œโ€ฒ = 270 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

To calculate the vertical shear stress, we use the following formula where M=the bending

moment, c=pipe radius and I=1.414โ„Ž๐ผ๐‘ข where h= height of the weld and ๐ผ๐‘ข = ๐œ‹๐‘Ÿ3

๐œ" =๐‘€๐‘

๐ผ

๐œ" ๐œ"

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œโ€ฒ

๐œ" ๐œ"

๐œโ€ฒ

V=300 lbf

๐‘€ = (2๐‘–๐‘›)(300 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“) = 600 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘“ ๐‘ฅ ๐‘–๐‘›

๐œ" =(600 ๐‘™๐‘๐‘  ๐‘ฅ ๐‘–๐‘›)(1๐‘–๐‘›)

3.14159๐‘–๐‘›2

๐œ" = 191 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

Then we calculated the magnitude of ๐œ

|๐œ| = โˆš๐‘กโ€ฒ2 + ๐œ"2

|๐œ| = โˆš2702 + 1912

|๐œ| = 331 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

With the |๐œ| value calculated we can find the factor of safety ๐‘›๐‘  (๐‘†๐‘ฆ was found assuming we

used weld electrode E60xx )

๐‘›๐‘  = ๐‘†๐‘ฆ

๐œ=

50,000 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–

331 ๐‘๐‘ ๐‘–= 151

Since ๐‘›๐‘ >1 the weld will not fail.

Solid Works verification of load capacity

A static simulation was performed in Solid Works on the bracket assembly represented by Figure

2. To begin, the shell features of the connecting pipe were set to a thickness of 0.154โ€. This is

the wall thickness of a 2โ€ schedule 40 steel pipe. Next the default global connection bond was

deleted in order to define the exact weld connections. Edge welds were placed on the pipe at

critical location points c, h, and a in Figure 3. Edge welds at c and a were 0.25โ€ single fillet

welds with an E60 electrode, the weld at h was a 0.25โ€ grove edge weld also with an E60

electrode. The bracket assembly was fixed by using a โ€œfixed geometryโ€ fixture on the back face

of the curved bracket that connects the pipe to the central staircase pole. Finally a 300lb vertical

forced was placed on the top face of the under-step bracket to simulate the force of someone

stepping on the nominal worst case of the step.

Table 2

Variable Weld c Weld h

Shear (psi) ๐œ 988.1 โ‰ˆ 400

Factor of Safety n 4.2 4.2

Figure 12 illustrates a section clipping of the cross section between the weld c and the curved bracket. Three total

points were probed where the weld is located giving an average shear of 988.1 psi.

Figure 12

Figure 13

Figure 13 illustrates the section clipping where weld h is located. The geometry of the thin pipe restricted probing

of the weld area. However, from the image it can be assumed that the shear is approximately 400 psi when

comparing the green/yellow pipe edge to the key on the right.

Figure 14 represents the Factor of Safety of the weld areas. From this image it can be determined from the

description in the top left that the minimum FOS in the entire assembly is 4.2 which is illustrated by the darkest red

on the scale to the right. Therefore when comparing the shade of red on the pipe where the welds are located, it is

clear that the entire pipe is the minimum FOS of 4.2.

Verification comparison

The table shown below compares the theoretical values with the SW model

Table 3

Weld c

variable Theoretical Solid Works Relative error

๐œ 1234 psi 988 psi 24.9%

๐‘›๐‘  40.5 4.2 864%

Figure 14

Table 4

Weld h

variable Theoretical Solid Works Relative error

๐œ 331 psi 400 psi 17.25%

๐‘›๐‘  151 4.2 3,495%

The large relative error for factors of safety shown above is most likely due to using an incorrect

formula for the factor of safety in my theoretical calculation. I wasnโ€™t 100% sure on how to

properly calculate the factor of safety of the weld since we didnโ€™t go over it in class in detail.

Another possibility is that instead of creating fillets as welds for the simulation, edge weld

connections were used. The somewhat large relative error of the shear stresses could be due to

the way that the solid works simulation was performed. Figures 15 and 16 below illustrate the

edge weld anaylsis for welds c and h using linear geometry. This appears to be a more precise

way of calculating the shear stress of a weld since welds are based off of linear geometry.

Figure 15

Evaluation

The point of this section is to see whether or not our staircase met specs and is safe. Since

all the factors of safety are greater than the target value of 1 (theoretical and SW) and that

we are within the building code, we can conclude that our design is safe.

References

[1] Budynas and Nisbett, 2011, SHIGLEYโ€™S MECHANICAL ENGINEERING DESIGN, 9th ed,

McGraw-Hill, NewYork.

[2] M. Griffis, 2014, EML3005 Fall 2015 Lectures.

[3] www.mcnichols.com, Schedule 40 thickness pipe dimension table

Figure 16