Staircase with hidden supporting structure

Good evening to you.

I'm a project to draw a simple straight staircase. Easy, except that the structure that supports the steps will be nest in a plasterboard wall.

Has anyone ever drawn this kind of thing?

Thank you for your feedback.

A+

Lucbirus

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See this type of staircase

http://www.roomstone.de/en/Products/Stairs/Fix-System

@+

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Thank you for this feedback.

Not a bad idea. 

 

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for a straight staircase

whether the load-bearing wall is likely to receive good fixing

All you need is a plate or stringer to be bolted or welded to the step(s)

It all depends on the width of the stairs and to minimize the bending of the said steps

therefore design steps with a minimum of boom bending

See this link among others

http://jean.lamaison.free.fr/flexion.html

@+ ;-)

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Great, the link.

I have what I need.

Thank you.

 

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I'm coming back to this post but for small drawing problems in solidworks.

 

So I'm drawing the staircase and the steps are in place. To these steps I will add at their ends, cords so that they are stable, and that the children do not fall down.

 

I have to draw the first two crodes on the first step, and I have managed to do a repatition driven by another repetition. So far so good.

 

Naturally, the higher you go, the shorter the ropes (cables). But with the repair they are all the same length and if you modify a cable all are impacted.

Is there a solution to this, or do you have to choose cables by cable  ?

I am attaching a small screenshot

Thank you for your help.

a+

Lucbirus

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Hello

For your cables, why not do a body repetition in the cable  room with a limitation by a higher plane?

may the force be with you.

 

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why not, but how do you  do that?

 

Which SW are you under?

SW 2015

See these links

http://www.lynkoa.com/tutos/3d/les-repetitions-sous-solidworks

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nen6vP8lX9g

@+ ;-)

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See attached doc made at the arrcache but in general that's it.

may the force be with you.

 


escalier.docx

I see.. For these cables that are on different markets, not as simple as on this explanation.

I tried but the Vaier l'escisse function is grayed out.

while writing to you, I thought of going through a 3D sketch that would then be mechanically welded. And it works: