Тёмный

The Extruded Cable-Stayed Footbridge! 

Paul Kassabian
Подписаться 49 тыс.
Просмотров 8 тыс.
50% 1

Опубликовано:

 

27 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 41   
@ericroberson8474
@ericroberson8474 Год назад
I'm so glad you shared this, Paul. Your work and educational materials are so interesting to me.
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thanks and you're welcome!
@errishavsingh3767
@errishavsingh3767 Год назад
@@PaulKassabian Hi sir this side Rishav from India and i am learning basic concepts of Bridge.... please help me to khow more as i am new here
@TomTurner704
@TomTurner704 Год назад
Far from being “Woody Allen's ugly brother,” I find you articulate, personable, witty and attractive… a person one would like to hang out with. You are one of the best “explainers” on RU-vid, and definitely the best explainer of structural principles. I like this bridge. Might it be called a “boom” bridge? The structural layout reminds me of how we would pull tree stumps, or fence posts, out of the ground. You tie a chain onto the stump/post and then up through a V notch in the end of a post propped up at about a 45-degree angle and then connected either to a tractor or a good strong come-along puller to the base of an adjacent tree. It converts pulling force to uplifting force. Isn't the load on the pedestrian bridge greatest, not simply when it is full of people, but when it's full of people and someone plays music causing the people to move rhythmically. If the song's rhythm happens to match the natural frequency of the bridge... that's when things can really go wrong. Whenever I find a cable pedestrian bridge, usually on hiking trails, I pace out to the center point and bounce up and down at different frequencies until I find the natural frequency of the cables. The up and down movement can become quite amplified, sort-of like “Gallopin Gertie” The Tacoma Narrows bridge collapse.
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thanks! And great point about dynamic crowd effects on structures with positive feedback. I think the most dangerous is when there is some rhythmic external source (e.g. music etc.) that keeps a large crowd, that would typically be disorganized, in sync with each other. This is sometimes seen at crowded stadia...see first few seconds of this for example! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Q5TArPeNB6o.html
@Misterrocha
@Misterrocha Год назад
I'm an strcutural engineer myself way down here in Brazil and your videos are amazing! It is great to get to know your work! Thanks a lot for sharing it!
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thank you very much!
@oneperspective8601
@oneperspective8601 Год назад
I am so jealous Paul. It’s very challenging finding a structural intern position right now and seeing your videos makes harder to wait. I’ve had a dream of working on buildings and very architectural bridges
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thanks for that...it's interesting because technical ability is the necessary part of being a structural engineer of course but real enthusiasm for your own work is what will keep you growing! Good luck!
@pavanchandan701
@pavanchandan701 Год назад
Awesome video. Filled with so much knowledge. Thank you very much sir for sharing your knowledge 🙏🙏
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
You're welcome!
@anouch14
@anouch14 Год назад
I love your video. Thanks for sharing - and great to see you virtually !! Been too long, Paul.
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thanks Aud! Way to long...reunion when we're next in the same country?
@abdullahadel9716
@abdullahadel9716 Год назад
Thanks.
@shingoeverard6744
@shingoeverard6744 Год назад
that was very interesting! Thank you for the presentation!
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
You're welcome!
@HeJurm
@HeJurm Год назад
Thanks for the new video!
@speedbird7587
@speedbird7587 Год назад
really nice and impressive
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Glad you like it!
@KF1
@KF1 Год назад
Neat bridge, man!
@jwdory
@jwdory Год назад
Graeat video!
@puridade1
@puridade1 Год назад
learning a lot with your videos !
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Glad to hear it!
@olson.pamela
@olson.pamela Год назад
I hope you have since met some smart women that clued you into the fact that you are handsome! Your intelligence and obvious kindness are very attractive qualities.
@wesleyc.4937
@wesleyc.4937 Год назад
YOU MEAN TO TELL ME ---- It's low maintenance AND it carries a load too?
@clintonchijioke330
@clintonchijioke330 Год назад
great to learn from you Sir
@Sammyismysidekick
@Sammyismysidekick Год назад
Thank you for service and impressive work
@hedaytullahkarimi1976
@hedaytullahkarimi1976 Год назад
I am from afghanistan and i appreciate your work and intelligence and i am big fan of you if you react to this i will be happy And how do you study your methods?
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Thank you...I have been a practicing structural engineer for >20 years and I also taught at MIT for 9 years and then at Harvard...so the videos are a combination of my project and teaching experiences!
@woodennecktie
@woodennecktie Год назад
nice solution to the resonation problem , altough weight is good against oscilation , weight is also your biggest problem , the dampers in the strings handle the longer waves. pity the design turned out less attractive from the blueprints
@realsabab
@realsabab Год назад
its a part of upcoming RTX 5090
@MikeAG333
@MikeAG333 Год назад
Aluminium, because we're right, and they're wrong. The clue is in the name of the language.😄😄 It would have been nice to see a section through the steps, because it is difficult to picture what you are talking about with the cantilever, and with the slipping elements tied together. 'twere it me (I'm an architect), I would be a bit disappointed with the big clunky lump of concrete that the steps climb. With a slim and elegant overall design I found that a bit brutal and intrusive. Even a good planting scheme to hide it would have helped. Ivy to the rescue! Your tower and its diagramatic explanation reminded me of the bridge I built to win a competition at university many years ago.....the lightest balsa bridge to span a 2 metre gap. I did it by putting the structure into compression along its length using dental floss to carry the 3kg load. It still holds the record, apparently.
@karoma7898
@karoma7898 Год назад
gongrajulashens! you're one of the many architectural engineers who went to make great and interesting things, which isn't a given where i live, usually you end up doing everyday homes and paperwork for developers, and answering some boring things like "can my house, made of plastic straws and toothpicks handle the weight of an 8 cubic meter indoor pool?" ... anyway, it helps to know how to spell congrajulashens :)
@TRON0314
@TRON0314 Год назад
HE IS BACK! 👏
@franko8572
@franko8572 Год назад
Dang, I’m so early! 21 seconds! Here we go, boys and girls! P.S. Thanks for the upload!
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
You're welcome!
@osamakhaled8169
@osamakhaled8169 Год назад
thanks for sharing i am learning a lot from your videos
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Glad to hear it!
@mrbigcat9
@mrbigcat9 Год назад
Worse load case runners covering every inch of the bridge running at a very high pace?
@FoxRiverBridge
@FoxRiverBridge Год назад
"So I don't hurt its feelings" earned my like
@PaulKassabian
@PaulKassabian Год назад
Liked back...
Далее
Lifting the 1,200 Ton Gateshead Millennium Bridge!
15:41
Modular Structures: Avoid These Big Mistakes!
20:06
Просмотров 24 тыс.
Harvard Model Bridge Testing! Trusses and Beams
13:16
The Surprising Fact About Many London Buildings
21:55
Просмотров 600 тыс.
The Clever Way to Count Tanks - Numberphile
16:45
Просмотров 1,2 млн
Golden Gate Bridge | The CRAZY Engineering behind it
15:28
3D Printing 3 Ways! Concrete + Metal + Glass!
11:07
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.
This experiment confirmed quantum physics
25:56
Просмотров 41 тыс.
How Frames Work! (Structures 7-1)
15:21
Просмотров 25 тыс.