quote:
Originally posted by OpenD
The main structural strength of the container comes from the box beam
frame. The sides add stiffness, and enclosure. Cutting holes for windows and doors general doesn't seem to be an issue as long as you build up around the openings the way you would with frame construction. Personally I'd rather do one large opening than a bunch of little ones
I do realize I am sticking my head in here....
The engineering design brief on a container is to create the cheapest. lightest weight, strongest, durable steel intermodal enclosure possible.
As such a container is formed up in what is called a unibody construction - each part of the container contributes to the overall strength - nothing is added that is redundant or not required.
This means that real strength of the container is the container - not the " box beams " even stacking them "six high" demands that the doors be closed and locked as this adds strength.
You will see this best demonstrated if you take out a full side wall(s) of a container - without the two side walls a 40 ft container basically becomes jello.
In fact one of the tricks to cutting containers is to chain them before you remove wall material because once you do they will at the very least sag and some will "spring out of shape" and getting them square again is a nightmare.
My point is the moment you touch a container in anyway you weaken it even the CSC demands re-certification of any containers the moment you make a single cut the container losses its certification.
Not trying to put anyone off just trying to dispell the myth that you can drag them out of a container yard, stack em up how you want cut out what you want and weld in some doors and windows and presto instant house !
In my opinion container homes arent easy or cheap and the real legacy of the shipping container in construction will ultimately be in the development of
modestly priced, super strong,
reconfigurable, relocatable modular housing solutions.
Its actually my hope that at some point we get the trade balance in order ( dont think that will happen ) and the availability of containers drys up and we start to look at new composite materials using the intermodal footprint.
If you want to watch the Anatomy of a Shipping Container Video its here.
http://www.containerhome.info/tutorial-2.html
Regards
Victor