David Tyler wrote:
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I specified a round tube for Footprint's new yard. A round tube has equal stiffness and strength in all planes and is clearly not prone to instability.
A square tube has equal stiffness when a load is applied in line with its faces or across its diagonal - but, counter-intuitively, when a load is applied across its diagonal, it has only 71% of the strength that it has when a load is applied in line with its edges. So even here, there is a possibility of unexpected failure.
The situation gets worse when the cross section is oval, elliptical or rectangular; but as I said above, a ratio of 1.54:1 has proved acceptable. At any greater ratio - well, I think the risk is unacceptable.
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Hi David,
Your discussion of cross-sectional shapes in yards suggests that all directions of bending force should be accommodated, and that it's a mistake to build as if any one direction were predominant. I agree. Fantail thinks so too.
But the comment I've put in bold above seems to devalue ovals wrongly, while criticising ellipses (if narrow) and rectangles (especially if narrow) quite rightly. (I hope that's clear.)
The x-s shapes that make most sense to me are fat oval and circular. The fat oval is a concession to the routine weight-bearing direction of bend, and I think that's reasonable. Fat rectangular timber yards are easier to build, but their corners will be weaker than the smooth surface of an oval of sufficient size. Our timber yards are, needless to say, fat ovals, and I based their shape on the principles we're talking about.
At any rate, I fail to see a single good reason for aircraft-style lightweight design in yards, especially since we can't predict in which direction nature will try to break them.
It's a tough life! Yards press and then bang against the mast, and get gusted around up there unpredictably, and even occasionally get pulled hard against a forgotten sail tie...
They need to be bomb-proof if possible, and heavy enough to come down like a stage curtain, to avoid... embarrassments.
Cheers,
Kurt