68Camaro wrote:Standard disclaimers apply. Not responsible for ... anything that might go wrong
highroller4321 wrote:I would not worry about it. I stack my tons 5 high and the skids they are on weigh aroudn 150lbs each. The skid has 4 legs with that are probably an inch by an inch. If it doesn't break under that than you have nothing to worry about with a 16x16 area.
TXBullion wrote:Concrete has a rating. A quick search reveals that a house foundation might be rated at 2500 psi. Pounds per square inch is the expanded abbreviation.
This information I just looked up so you will have to verify if it is correct or not You are talking about 2,000 pounds. a 16"x16" section would be 256 square inches. 256 square inches at 2500 pounds per square inch. This would give this a capacity of 640,000 pounds? Seems high but might be right if anyone wants to chime in. Also not sure if this would effect shifting without breaking
I have a potentially silly question, but I honestly don't know if this is a problem or not. If I were to stack pennies in $25 boxes in a small area on a concrete floor in my basement, could the concentrated weight cause issues with the foundation of the house? Consider a one ton stack of 8 boxes per row and 16 rows high. That would be one ton on weight on a 16 x 16 inch area of concrete in the corner of my basement...is that too much? I'm not anywhere close yet, but could get there with a few months work and just wondering if I need to reconsider my storage plan.
tinhorn wrote:TXBullion wrote:Concrete has a rating. A quick search reveals that a house foundation might be rated at 2500 psi. Pounds per square inch is the expanded abbreviation.
This information I just looked up so you will have to verify if it is correct or not You are talking about 2,000 pounds. a 16"x16" section would be 256 square inches. 256 square inches at 2500 pounds per square inch. This would give this a capacity of 640,000 pounds? Seems high but might be right if anyone wants to chime in. Also not sure if this would effect shifting without breaking
AAAKKKK! I meant pounds per square INCH, but typed pounds per square foot. Glad you caught it.
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