Brice,

I am at work and so am just guessing at the dimensions of the i beam.  The 
web is probably six inches high at least, I'm not sure I've ever groped it 
completely, I can only touch the bottom flange when standing on the 
ground.

It is probably a quarter inch thick.

This is a pretty structural member of the house.  The basement of the 
house extends beyond the front wall of the house and under the front 
porch.  There are two stub walls in the basement about three feet wide. 
The i beam sits on these walls and supports the front wall of the house 
above it.  So, when you walk from the main basement, between the two stub 
walls, and under the beam, you are then standing in the part of the 
basement that is actually under the front porch.

My ultimate goal is to move the main water line, and one set of pipes for 
a radiator up closer to the ceiling.  If I am ever going to build a shop 
and finish the basement, moving these closer to the joists will give me 
more head room.  The only pipe that would have to penetrate the i beam 
would be the one Copper water pipe, I think it is 3/4 inch.

The water pipe comes in at the front of the house, up close to the 
ceiling.  It then turns 90 down, drops below the i beam, then turns 90 to 
run horizontal again, to the back of the basement.

In theory, I could put two mor 90s so that it does a U around the i beam, 
but I think that would end up acting like a trap and collect junk and be a 
problem.

  -- 
Blue skies.
Dan Rossi
Carnegie Mellon University.
E-Mail: [email protected]
Tel:    (412) 268-9081

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