Is a 35mm steel square tube frame strong enough to support 100kg without flexing

furnituresteel

I've not been able to find an electric sit/stand desk that is a size I want so I've designed my own. I'm confident in the electronics side of things but I'm not certain of the strength of the materials. The actuators I'm using have a stroke of 450mm and can push/pull 1500N so they're definitely strong enough but the desktop is 3.2m long with a simple rectangle steel frame made of 35mm square tube with a 2mm thickness. I will have a lot of gear on the desk so I want to be able to puch up to 100kg excluding the desk itself so I have to consider the weight of the materials used. Will this frame be strong enough to handle 50kg-ish in the very center without flexing?

Images of my design can be found here: https://imgur.com/a/TJZlLRk

Best Answer

My structural tables don’t go “down” that low, but assuming A36 grade steel, (which is the most common in the U.S.), a 2 1/2” tube with a 1/4” wall thickness will support about 1,000 lbs. on a 10 foot span. Therefore, I’d assume two 35 mm tubes with 2 mm thick walls will “support” 100 kg without failing. However, I see several issues, 1) it will have significant deflection (flex, as you call it), 2) the legs are too small to keep the top from rotating, 3) 50 kg in the center of the top will depend more on the top than the frame, and 4) the joints act as “pin” connections without diagonal braces, so they’ll easily rotate.

BTW, are you sure the floor can support that much weight?