Analyze beam response from point and distributed loading cases. Get reactions, moments, shears, and deflection. Plot diagrams, save reports, and verify structural assumptions easily.
| Parameter | Example Value | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Span | 8 m | Load case: Combined |
| Point Load | 18 kN at 3 m | Reaction A: 35.250 kN |
| UDL | 6 kN/m over full span | Reaction B: 30.750 kN |
| Material Stiffness | 200 GPa | Max moment: 78.750 kN·m |
| Section | 250 mm × 450 mm | Max deflection: -1.306 mm |
| Inertia | 1,898,437,500 mm4 | Serviceability: Pass |
This calculator combines equilibrium equations with Euler–Bernoulli beam theory.
ΣV = 0 and ΣM = 0 are used to find support reactions.
R_A = P(L-a)/L + wL/2
R_B = Pa/L + wL/2
V(x) = R_A - wx - P·H(x-a)
M(x) = R_Ax - wx²/2 - P·(x-a) for x ≥ a
EI·y''(x) = M(x)
Deflection is found by numerically integrating curvature across the beam while enforcing zero deflection at both supports.
A simply supported beam rests on two supports. One support usually resists vertical movement, while the other allows horizontal movement. The beam carries load without fixed-end restraint, so end moments are normally zero.
This version handles a single point load, a full-span uniformly distributed load, or both together. It then computes reactions, shear, bending moment, and deflection from the combined loading condition.
Load position changes the support reactions and the peak bending moment location. An off-center point load shifts force toward the nearest support and changes where the beam experiences its highest stress and deflection.
The second moment of area, often called I, measures how strongly a section resists bending. Larger values reduce deflection for the same material and loading. It depends on the section shape and dimensions.
Elastic modulus describes material stiffness. Steel, concrete, and timber have different stiffness values. A higher modulus produces smaller deflections when the same beam geometry and loading are used.
The serviceability check compares calculated maximum deflection with an allowable limit such as L/360. Passing does not prove full structural safety, but it helps assess whether beam movement stays within common practical limits.
They are useful for preliminary sizing, checking, and learning. Final design should still consider code requirements, load combinations, self-weight, lateral stability, bearing, shear capacity, and material-specific design checks.
Yes. Choose the custom inertia option when you already know the section property from a handbook, design sheet, or manufacturer table. That method is helpful for standard rolled or built-up sections.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.