patrick_g
Elite Member
I recently moved a pole barn which is 35x70 with 18 ft side walls and 14x14 roll up doors centered in both ends. It was originally built with a slab floor and the 6 inch diameter steel pipe columns (poles) embedded in the foundation 2 feet.
I cut the columns off flush with the floor and moved the bld intact a quarter mile across one of my pastures to its new location. I now have a dirt floor and the columns are terminated atop 18 inch diameter 12-15 foot deep columns with embedded weld plates on top of the columns.
As the column to weld plate connection makes a good hinge and offers little resistance to the whole structure folding like a parallelogram I had to do some engineering. The metal skin offers considerable sheer strength and helps stiffen the walls against deformation but not nearly enough for me to be comfortable. I welded on diagonal bracing (approx 3 in dia pipe) to stiffen the structure to replace the rigidity lost by not having the columns buried.
The piers will easily carry the weight and will not move laterally but contribute essentially nothing to the prevention of the poles leaning, hence the diagonal bracing.
I also have a rotating jib crane with traveling winch on it. The vertical for it is a 12x14 inch I beam welded to a vertical column. It bends very little when the crane is loaded (2 ton capacity on traveler.) There was a problem though. if you swing the crane so it is oriented cross wise of the bld (the boom is a about 17 feet long) and lift a heavy weight then the force of the lift is translated to a lateral force trying to push the collocated truss laterally, deforming the structure. I added a large triangularizing brace on the opposite side to stiffen the structure against this lateral load at the height of the eaves.
What might I have done differently if I had it to do again?
Embed steel pipes vertically, deeply in the piers with a few feet sticking above the top. These pipes OD would be a decent fit (slightly larger than) the ID of the 6 inch columns. Split the part of the pipes above the piers longways with my plasma cutter. When sitting the building down at the new location maneuver to bring the bottom of the columns into the cut out vertical pipes, force them into intimate contact and tack weld them. After the moving crew has their stuff out of the way go back and weld the cut off vertical halves back in place capturing the columns.
This would have obviated the need for all the additional bracing and made the bld even stronger than original.
Now then, regarding the comparison of losing strength in a wood member by drilling it to receive a bolt vs nailing it with "less invasive" nails. I get the notion of using large bolts to fasten toothpicks together and it is something to discuss around the table between beers but not a very practical concern. If the "timbers" are so small as to be seriously weakened by bolts large enough to be safe for the loads and forces involved then you have serious issues with timber size/strength.
Pat
I cut the columns off flush with the floor and moved the bld intact a quarter mile across one of my pastures to its new location. I now have a dirt floor and the columns are terminated atop 18 inch diameter 12-15 foot deep columns with embedded weld plates on top of the columns.
As the column to weld plate connection makes a good hinge and offers little resistance to the whole structure folding like a parallelogram I had to do some engineering. The metal skin offers considerable sheer strength and helps stiffen the walls against deformation but not nearly enough for me to be comfortable. I welded on diagonal bracing (approx 3 in dia pipe) to stiffen the structure to replace the rigidity lost by not having the columns buried.
The piers will easily carry the weight and will not move laterally but contribute essentially nothing to the prevention of the poles leaning, hence the diagonal bracing.
I also have a rotating jib crane with traveling winch on it. The vertical for it is a 12x14 inch I beam welded to a vertical column. It bends very little when the crane is loaded (2 ton capacity on traveler.) There was a problem though. if you swing the crane so it is oriented cross wise of the bld (the boom is a about 17 feet long) and lift a heavy weight then the force of the lift is translated to a lateral force trying to push the collocated truss laterally, deforming the structure. I added a large triangularizing brace on the opposite side to stiffen the structure against this lateral load at the height of the eaves.
What might I have done differently if I had it to do again?
Embed steel pipes vertically, deeply in the piers with a few feet sticking above the top. These pipes OD would be a decent fit (slightly larger than) the ID of the 6 inch columns. Split the part of the pipes above the piers longways with my plasma cutter. When sitting the building down at the new location maneuver to bring the bottom of the columns into the cut out vertical pipes, force them into intimate contact and tack weld them. After the moving crew has their stuff out of the way go back and weld the cut off vertical halves back in place capturing the columns.
This would have obviated the need for all the additional bracing and made the bld even stronger than original.
Now then, regarding the comparison of losing strength in a wood member by drilling it to receive a bolt vs nailing it with "less invasive" nails. I get the notion of using large bolts to fasten toothpicks together and it is something to discuss around the table between beers but not a very practical concern. If the "timbers" are so small as to be seriously weakened by bolts large enough to be safe for the loads and forces involved then you have serious issues with timber size/strength.
Pat