Handbook of Civil Engineering Calculations

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  1. Continue the construction
    Draw a line through Q in Fig. Sb parallel to da in Fig. 8c. Locate -S" on this line at a hori-
    zontal distance of 17 ft (5.2 m) from Q.

  2. Complete the construction
    Draw R'S' and db. Test the accuracy of the construction by determining whether these
    lines are parallel.

  3. Determine the required length of the cable
    Obtain the required length of the cable by scaling the lengths of the segments to Fig. 8Z?.
    Thus P'R' = 17.1 ft (5.2 m); R'S' = 18.4 ft (5.6 m); S'Q' = 17.6 ft (5.4 m); and length of
    cable= 53.lft (16.2m).


PARABOLIC CABLE TENSION AND LENGTH


A suspension bridge has a span of 960 ft (292.61 m) and a sag of 50 ft (15.2 m). Each ca-
ble carries a load of 1.2 kips per linear foot (kips/lin ft) (17,512.68 N/m) uniformly dis-
tributed along the horizontal. Compute the tension in the cable at midspan and at the sup-
ports, and determine the length of the cable.


Calculation Procedure:


  1. Compute the tension at midspan
    A cable carrying a load uniformly distributed along the horizontal assumes the form of a
    parabolic arc. In Fig. 9, which shows such a cable having supports at the same level, the
    tension at midspan is H= wL^2 /(8d), where H = midspan tension, kips (kN); w = load on a
    unit horizontal distance, kips/lin ft (kN/m); L = span, ft (m); d = sag, ft (m). Substituting
    yields H= 1.2(960)^2 /[8(50)] = 2765 kips (12,229 kN).


FIGURE 9 Cable supporting load uniformly distributed along horizontal.

Unit load = w
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