Load Classes & Selection Principles for Platform Steel Grating-About Anping Fengqian Wire Mesh Products Co., Ltd.

Load Classes & Selection Principles for Platform Steel Grating

How to Choose Safe & Cost‑Effective Steel Grating for Your Industrial Platform?

In industrial platforms, equipment access walkways, tank top platforms, and similar projects, the correct selection of steel grating directly affects personnel safety, equipment stability, and project cost. Over‑specifying wastes money; under‑specifying creates safety hazards.

This article provides a clear, actionable selection framework covering load class definitioncore selection principles, and matching bar height with support span.


1. Load Classes – Defined by Application

The load capacity of steel grating is not a single number – it depends on installation location, frequency of use, and load type (static/dynamic). We classify common industrial platforms into five load classes:

Load ClassDesign Load (kN/m²)Reference Load (t/m²)Typical Application
Light≤ 2.5 kN/m²≤ 0.25 t/m²Personnel walkways, fencing platforms, indoor access
Light-Medium3 – 4 kN/m²0.3 – 0.4 t/m²Workshop operating platforms, general equipment access
Medium5 – 8 kN/m²0.5 – 0.8 t/m²Occasional forklift traffic, small equipment bases, chemical plant platforms
Heavy8 – 15 kN/m²0.8 – 1.5 t/m²Frequent forklift traffic, heavy machinery maintenance, port loading areas
Extra Heavy> 15 kN/m²> 1.5 t/m²Container terminals, mining heavy platforms, large equipment bases

Load conversion: 1 t/m² ≈ 9.8 kN/m² – in engineering practice, 1 t/m² is often taken as 10 kN/m².

Additional notes on load types:

  • Static load: Equipment dead weight, standing personnel – can be calculated as uniform distributed load.
  • Dynamic load: Forklift movement, vibrating equipment, walking personnel – multiply static load by a dynamic factor of 1.3–1.5.
  • Concentrated load: Forklift wheel loads, equipment support legs – requires separate local bearing verification.

2. Core Selection Principles for Steel Grating

Principle 1: Bar height determines capacity; span determines bar height

The load capacity of steel grating comes mainly from the bending stiffness of the bearing bars. Bar height (h) has a much greater influence than thickness (t).

Section modulus W ≈ (b × h²) / 6, where b is the bar width (i.e., thickness).
Capacity is proportional to the square of bar height.

Bar Height (mm)Relative Capacity (25mm = 1.0)Recommended Max Span (Load ≤5 kN/m²)
200.64≤ 800 mm
251.00≤ 1000 mm
321.64≤ 1200 mm
402.56≤ 1500 mm
504.00≤ 1800 mm
656.76≤ 2200 mm

Principle 2: Closer bar pitch = higher capacity, but higher cost

Common bar pitches are 30mm and 40mm. A 30mm pitch has about 33% more bearing bars per unit area than 40mm, increasing load capacity by approx. 25%, with slightly less open area (slower drainage but better fall prevention).

Bar PitchFeaturesRecommended Application
30mmHigher capacity, better fall preventionForklift traffic, heavy loads, high‑traffic areas
40mmEconomical, lighter, faster drainageWalkways, general industrial platforms

Principle 3: Design deflection must meet comfort and safety requirements

Deflection is the bending deformation of grating under load. Excessive deflection gives an unsafe “bouncing” feeling and can cause weld fatigue.

  • Recommended design deflection limitL/200 (L = support span)
  • Maximum allowable deflection (short‑term peak): L/150

Example: Span L = 1200mm → design deflection ≤ 6mm.

Principle 4: Dynamic and impact loads require extra safety factors

For dynamic conditions such as forklift traffic or equipment lifting, multiply the calculated uniform load by a dynamic factor of 1.3–1.5. For impact‑prone areas (e.g., drop‑loading platforms), a factor of 2.0 is recommended.


3. Load Class vs. Recommended Grating Models

The table below can be used for quick selection, assuming a typical support span of 1200mm and 30mm bar pitch.

Load ClassDesign Load (kN/m²)Recommended Bar SizeRecommended ModelMax Recommended Span
Light≤ 2.525×5G255/30/1001200mm
Light-Medium3 – 425×5 or 32×5G325/30/1001200mm
Medium5 – 832×5G325/30/1001200mm
Heavy8 – 1240×5G405/30/1001500mm (verify)
Extra Heavy> 1250×5 or 65×5G505/30/100Calculate per project

Note: If your actual span is less than 1200mm, a lower bar height may be sufficient. If greater than 1200mm, you must increase bar height or add more support beams.


4. Selection Calculation Example

Project background: A food processing plant needs an equipment maintenance platform. Support beam spacing is 1500mm. Expected uniform load is 8 kN/m² (including equipment self‑weight and personnel).

Step 1 – Determine load class
8 kN/m² → falls under Heavy class.

Step 2 – Check initial bar height
From the load class table, Heavy class suggests 40×5 bars. However, the table assumes a 1200mm span – our actual span is 1500mm, so we need to go one size higher.

Step 3 – Adjust for longer span
Span increases from 1200mm to 1500mm (a 25% increase) → recommend increasing bar height from 40mm to 50mm.

Step 4 – Final recommendation
Choose G505/30/100 (50×5 bearing bars, 30mm pitch), hot‑dip galvanized.
If the platform is in a wet environment, choose the serrated version: G505/30/100F.

Step 5 – Deflection check
Span = 1500mm → design deflection limit L/200 = 7.5mm.
For 50×5 bars under 8 kN/m², deflection is typically 5–7mm – acceptable.


5. Common Selection Mistakes & How to Avoid Them

❌ MistakeConsequence✅ Correct Practice
Looking only at price, ignoring spanInsufficient capacity, risk of collapseDetermine support span first, then bar height
Ignoring dynamic load factorWeld fatigue and cracking over timeAdd 1.3–1.5 factor for dynamic conditions
Placing bearing bars parallel to supportsCapacity drops by >80%Bearing bars must be perpendicular to supports
Using plain bars in wet/oily areasSlip accidentsChoose serrated bars (F model)
No allowance for HDG distortionGrating warps after galvanizingKeep bar length/height ratio ≤100

6. Summary – Four‑Step Selection Method

  1. Define the use scenario → determine load class (kN/m² or t/m²)
  2. Measure support beam spacing → obtain span L (mm)
  3. Select bar height from table → ensure recommended load capacity ≥ your actual load
  4. Check environmental requirements – serrated bars? thicker galvanizing? border frame?

If you already know your platform dimensions and load but are unsure which model to choose, please contact our engineers. We can provide a free load‑span calculation sheet and CAD drawing to help you make the safest and most economical decision.