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Ice age heat wave, cant complain. |
Suppose’n I wanted to use 4” schedule 40 PVC as a stand, meaning I’d cut it in to a 4” section and stood it upright, how much weight would it support? Can it hold 400lbs? What about schedule 80 pvc? NRA Life Member Steak: Rare. Coffee: Black. Bourbon: Neat. | ||
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Go Vols! |
Look up pvc jet ski stands. Most you see are supporting in similar weight and that is lengthwise. | |||
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Member |
I'm not an expert, but I believe the tensile strength on 4" schedule 40 is over 4000lbs. I'm not sure how that relates to compressive strength, but I'd bet 400lbs is no big deal. __________________________ "Too much of anything is bad, but too much of good whiskey is barely enough." -Mark Twain | |||
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semi-reformed sailor |
You mean like a deer stand? 10 feet or so above ground? Sch40 will get what you want, but I don’t know that I’d feel all warm and fuzzy about it….plus unless you paint it UV is a pvc killer…. "Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor.” Robert A. Heinlein “You may beat me, but you will never win.” sigmonkey-2020 “A single round of buckshot to the torso almost always results in an immediate change of behavior.” Chris Baker | |||
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As Extraordinary as Everyone Else |
Just like sizing a post for a deck it depends on the height. I’d assume that if you’re talking about 2 or 3 feet probably but if you’re talking about 15 or 20’ not so much… ------------------ Eddie Our Founding Fathers were men who understood that the right thing is not necessarily the written thing. -kkina | |||
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Savor the limelight |
It'll support a lot more weight if you pour it full of concrete. Makes a great post for the mailbox. | |||
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Member |
I used 3" pvc, 3 pieces about 3" long under the water heater so it didn't sit directly on the concrete floor. A 50 gallon water heater full of water has to be around that weight. | |||
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Ice age heat wave, cant complain. |
In this instance, it would be 4" tall, 4" diameter, supporting +/- 400lbs, I cannot fill it with concrete. It would be interior, so I'm assuming UV degradation isnt a problem. NRA Life Member Steak: Rare. Coffee: Black. Bourbon: Neat. | |||
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Member |
4" will not be any sort of problem. You could use much smaller dia & not have an issue, the vertical load bearing isn't even worth looking up. The only issue I could possibly see is how you are supporting/balancing whatever load you have - I'd bet it's bigger than 4" dia, so balance & attachment will come in to play. 4" is not a big deal no matter what, but PVC doesn't have great lateral strength - it will bend & then fail if the load isn't balanced. | |||
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Don't Panic |
Strength of materials is one thing. Whether it will work in a particular design is another. Whether a structure will support a given weight depends on the details (geometry, e.g.) In other words, just knowing XYZ material is being used will not tell you whether a given structure will fail. You could build a bridge using wood and have it stand, or a bridge out of steel and see it collapse. Some things are strong in compression and fail quickly under tension. I think PVC pipe probably fits into that category - a long stretch of unsupported PVC pipe would not be hard to crack with sufficient load in the center of the unsupported span. In other words....need more details. A sketch, maybe? | |||
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Ice age heat wave, cant complain. |
I dont have a sketch. Assume a totem pole, varying in height from 5' - 7'. This PVC will operate as the base for the totem poles, or a spacer if you will. PVC sits on floor and totem poles on PVC. Max weight is around 400lbs. I suppose the alternative is steel. NRA Life Member Steak: Rare. Coffee: Black. Bourbon: Neat. | |||
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chickenshit |
That should be no problem. Hockey pucks might do the trick as well. ____________________________ Yes, Para does appreciate humor. | |||
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Ice age heat wave, cant complain. |
I need the material to be hollow as it's overlaying a 3" steel pipe. NRA Life Member Steak: Rare. Coffee: Black. Bourbon: Neat. | |||
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I don't know man I just got here myself |
From strength and materials classes many moons ago: Cross sectional area of schedule 40 PVC pipe = 3.12 in2. Compressive strength PVC = about 8000 psi 8000 psi/3.12 in2 = 2564 pounds to compression failure. 400 pounds good to go. | |||
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