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3 answers

Probably not, but it will require engineering. Without knowing more about what you are doing, it is difficult to answer.

An engineer will have to specify how to build it. It also depends on the loading (weight) you will be putting on it and the percentage of it that is live load or dead load. This person will also be able to specify materials, sizes, etc. to achieve this.

Why did you put this in the geography section? Try asking it again in engieering and it might be seen by more people that have expertise.

2006-11-29 04:22:20 · answer #1 · answered by Snoopy's Best Friend 2 · 0 0

This question is like asking "Can I reach the can of soup?"
How tall are you?
How high is the soup?
Do you have a ladder?
You have not provided enough data to give an answer.
Why did you put this question in Geography? Your question should also be written as "without support" Are you not a native speaker?

2006-11-29 12:43:27 · answer #2 · answered by lampoilman 5 · 0 0

you can either build it and hope it doesnt fall on you or you can use mathmatics to determine what size strctural members and what spans you can have. this will in fact require more information. your choice(i say the math is simpler)

2006-12-03 10:47:36 · answer #3 · answered by polyesterfred 3 · 0 0

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