So i have 15x15 interior rooms on either side of a 3x15 walkway that i use for my killbox in my mountain base.
Make underground roof support systems without colaps.
Roof support systems are typically created with wood and sometimes steel beams.
Our economical and labor saving designs which include roof pipe supports roof mounted duct supports access ramps maintenance platforms.
Which puts far too much weight on the brace itself and leads to collapse.
While some earth sheltered homes are built completely beneath ground level many are constructed using a technique known as berming.
It is essentially a shallow cavity dug into the sand with branches covering 3 4ths the way across.
Manufactures roof supporta that save time and money and give roof maintenance workers better safer rooftop access to equipment.
This is why many tunnels are lined with materials like steel or concrete to provide support to the tunnel walls and transfer the stresses in the subsurface around the tunnel.
Structural issues like these are difficult to solve without significant renovation.
Three independent methods were used to evaluate the roof collapse of underground rectangular cavities for a range of geometries and rock properties 15.
A scout pit can be dug out to make an underground fort in sandy areas.
Earth bermed homes are built largely above ground but piles of soil are then pushed up against the walls all the way to the top to form a protective cocoon of earth and vegetation that will separate the outer shell of the home from the open air.
Undesirable eg collapse of the roof above a roadway although some are expected eg the collapse of the overburden above a longwall panel.
The collapse of the overburden strata above an underground opening can be subdivided into two groups.
Poorly braced rafters can also cause a sagging roof crooked rooftops and other serious problems.
These lining systems add a major cost to the tunnel construction.
Moreover an analytical upper bound method.
The rooftop support systems rts division of eberl iron works inc.
I was under the impression that you could make 16x16 rooms under a mountain without it collapsing and i have two 17x17 rooms with one support elsewhere in the base that have never collapsed on me.
The 15x15 rooms where i plan to plce my turrets keep caving in in the middle.
For both cases mine designers need to be able to predict if and how the failure will occur.
Rock on the other hand behaves a little bit differently in that it does have some tensile strength.