Deflection of tubing
Bonehead, you hit the nail on the head. Your background serves you well. I used to weld on conveyor truss frames with a guy who was a certified bridge welder. Valuable experience! Now I am in the engineering side of bulk material handling conveyors for aggregate, coal, etc., but am also not an engineer.
As far as actual tubing strength-below are some numbers that are much simpler to understand. I have used 2000 lbs as a point loading for the tube, keep in mind that our vehicles will probably have only 1000 lbs max dead load on each frame rail. I used 2000 to compensate for some of the live load that will be applied by engine torque, road vibration, etc. actual loads may indeed by higher with severe bouncing and other stresses that we are all capable of putting on a frame!
A 3x2x3/16" rect tube that is 96" long will deflect .427" @ 2000# load; or .2135" @ 1000# load (half).
A 4x2x3/16" rect tube that is 96" long will deflect .205" @ 2000# load; or .1025" @ 1000# load (half).
That being said, let's clear up some assumptions...if the tube is shorter, the deflection will be less. The "American Institute of Steel Construction" handbook does not give "
I" values for 11 gage, so I am not able to show the difference in deflection between the two. Let's look at it another way, a racing rule of thumb that we lived by was that for 10 lbs of weight it took another 1 hp to make up the difference. If that is true and 16' of 4x2x3/16 = 110 lbs, vs. 16' of 3x2x11gage = 60 lbs, then we need only 5hp to make up for the 50 additional pounds of weight. From what I've seen here, we are all capable of producing enough horsepower!!
Ultimately, "when in doubt, build it stout" is the safest way to protect you and your investment.
Another rule of thumb that I thought might be valuable to some of you-when cutting away a portion of structural material, it is necessary to replace that material with an equivalant amount of area. Example: if you cut away 1" x 1" you need to weld a 1" x 1" piece of the same thickness material around the cutout to compensate for the loss of strength.
Sorry this is such a long post, but I've seen my share of wrecked street cars, race cars and conveyors that have hit the ground to want to warn y'all that safety should always come first!
If you have any other specific engineering related questions, shoot them my way and I can have my group of engineers give some sort of answer. Also, thanks Namboo-my Indian engineer for doing the calculations shown above!!