NickfromWI
King of Splices
So I've been having a welder make us up these little props. I think we got the design down pretty solid:
They basically take a piece of square tubing (usually 4x4), weld a plate on the bottom to be the base, weld a plate on the top to be cap, drill a hole in the middle of the cap, weld a nut to the top of the hole, then we screw in a piece of threaded rod (usually ⅝" or ½") into the nut at the top. Bam. Done.
We finally have a tree to prop that is much larger than all the others we've done. We're at a point where I'm wondering about the strength of the metal. I asked the welder and he said he didn't know and I could look it up and for liability reasons he didn't wanna say much more than that. I called a few local metal workers that specialize in structural work and they said they can make it and certify it to a certain strength, but that they couldn't give me the strength until the contract was signed and their price was like $1,000 more than what my welder charges.
I tried googling it, and I'm learning that I can't figure it out. I know the dimensions are 4x4, wall thickness 3/16" (which my welder says is way overkill, but the cost isn't much more than ⅛" so why not hedge our bets a little....and I totally agree with this mind set). I know there are 2 factors here: 1- the actual compression strength of the metal tubing and 2- how much force the treaded rod/nut can handle.
So all that being said, do you guys have any wisdom to impart to guide me (other than pay the $1,000!)???
love
nick

They basically take a piece of square tubing (usually 4x4), weld a plate on the bottom to be the base, weld a plate on the top to be cap, drill a hole in the middle of the cap, weld a nut to the top of the hole, then we screw in a piece of threaded rod (usually ⅝" or ½") into the nut at the top. Bam. Done.
We finally have a tree to prop that is much larger than all the others we've done. We're at a point where I'm wondering about the strength of the metal. I asked the welder and he said he didn't know and I could look it up and for liability reasons he didn't wanna say much more than that. I called a few local metal workers that specialize in structural work and they said they can make it and certify it to a certain strength, but that they couldn't give me the strength until the contract was signed and their price was like $1,000 more than what my welder charges.
I tried googling it, and I'm learning that I can't figure it out. I know the dimensions are 4x4, wall thickness 3/16" (which my welder says is way overkill, but the cost isn't much more than ⅛" so why not hedge our bets a little....and I totally agree with this mind set). I know there are 2 factors here: 1- the actual compression strength of the metal tubing and 2- how much force the treaded rod/nut can handle.
So all that being said, do you guys have any wisdom to impart to guide me (other than pay the $1,000!)???
love
nick