Possibly, but you haven't mentioned thickness of the steel -8 x 24 is not enough info for that calculation.
Use a steel beam.. That would be code.. steel w10x15 (50ksi) I beam.
With a span of only 8" you can probably use a wood beam, but without a set of plans no one can accurately answer your question.
There are a lot of considerations to be taken into account for sizing steel shapes, especially for a residential home. For instance, what are the load imposed upon the beam? How will the beam be supported? What environment will the beam sit in (i.e. high humidity, moisture, vibration)? A licensed professional engineer or architect in your state can better answer this question.
You don't glue BX cable to steel. If it has to go on a beam, you usually hold it on with plastic 'tie wraps'. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Wire ties are not recommended for mounting armored bx cables to steel beams. Wire ties are normally used for bundling wires together to keep them neat, though some glue on cabinet tabs are made to mount wires inside control cabinets. These are not meant for external wire mounting. Cast aluminum clamps are made that hold the bx cable to the beam. a hole must be drilled in the beam to mount the clamps with screws, OR specially made mounting clamps (similar to c-clamps can be mounted to the edge of the beam, then the clamps mounted to those. It is recommended there be no less than one clamp every 6 feet (~2 meters).
1'*1'
Use a steel beam.. That would be code.. steel w10x15 (50ksi) I beam.
What size steel I beam do I need to span a 32 feet garage with a floored storage above and no posts
With a span of only 8" you can probably use a wood beam, but without a set of plans no one can accurately answer your question.
There are a lot of considerations to be taken into account for sizing steel shapes, especially for a residential home. For instance, what are the load imposed upon the beam? How will the beam be supported? What environment will the beam sit in (i.e. high humidity, moisture, vibration)? A licensed professional engineer or architect in your state can better answer this question.
189.270589 liters
It depends on the roof load and the actual clear span. Off hand, I would guess htat you haven't given this much thought. A rule of thumb for a steel truss is one inch per foot of span or in your case 40 inches. If you want to use a steel I-beam, you can get that from a good municipal library from the steel beam institute, but you are going to need a crane to place it. Dieter in Cincinnati
well a low beam can be from nothing to 1 foot high a medium beam is 2 and a half feet high and a standard high beam is 3 and a half feet high
250 Feet
That depends on how heavy it is. Steel beams are measured by height and width and weight-per-length As an example A beam you describe as measured in the UK could be 200mm X 100mm X 30kg/m 12 feet is approx 4m so total beam weight 120kg. This is just an example and it all depends on the unit weight. If you measure the thickness of the steel then look up steel tables online you should get a pretty good idea.
97 feet.
250 Feet
4.07 feet