Question: Is it acceptable to design a wood beam for the shear at 'd' from support?
I researched this topic, here and elsewhere, but was unable to find a good answer.
This thread (http://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=21883) had good explanations for steel and concrete, but wood fell off...
I agree for the multi-story system, so let's just stick to single story where there is only one diaphragm loading the shear wall. This example could also be considered as the top story of a multi-story building.
Is there anywhere that this is stated as acceptable? Both AISC and AISI allow...
Framing system: Light-frame bearing walls with wood sheathing.
Codes: IBC, ASCE 7, NDS SDPW&S
Is it acceptable to design collectors based on the capacity of the shear wall, in lieu of using omega, rho, or the other required loads per ASCE 7? While I have not seen anything explicitly or...
None that I know of. It's very typical for 3rd party programs to have their own header. It helps the plan checker know that the engineer is using a program instead of their own calculations and gives it some trust. Without the header, a plan checker might ask what the program is, how it...
Sorry to show up late. There is a lot of interpretation with what is applicable when using bearing plates.
ACI 318-11 is a little more explicit with what is applicable. D.2.2 specifically says that multiple anchors connected to a single steel plate are not applicable, and D.2.3 does not...
That was a lot of reading!
The 1997 UBC designs for Life Safety, so if you can prove that it was in-fact designed for that code then you should be in the clear. Otherwise you will have to use ASCE 31 to verify the building.
I couldn't tell you about the other forms, I have only limited...
My firm currently has a whole suite of LISP routines that make drafting very fast. I'm looking into improving it as we are branching out into newer areas, but without this automation you're really hurting yourself for time.
I recently looked into lateral bracing of steel beams. Per AISC, I need to brace both top and bottom flanges.
I wanted to check the stiffness of just using stiffener plates to brace the bottom flange when the top flange is fully braced. See attached.
When I check it this way, the stiffness...
Some engineers just call that a miter joint, but I would be more specific. Full CJP welds all around. Since the 12x6 is slanted, they can line up all 4 sides with the 6x6 tube.
Retain-Pro is the one you can tie into Enercalc, right? I've always hated their UI and complexity, it makes it very easy to miss something or make mistakes.
I have always used a custom spreadsheet. However, we have recently looked into the Tedds software. They have modules much like Enercalc...
If you have a heel, then your angle of friction would indeed be through the soil instead of at the face of the concrete. You still have static friction to overcome before there is movement. I wouldn't know how to quantify that friction, as I'm very inexperienced in soil mechanics.
The soil...
It's also called bridging. A few manufacturers now have both bridging and blocking for metal studs that is very easy to install.
A typical detail is to use pieces of track between the studs, where the web is bend up and screwed into the web of the studs while the flanges go straight and are...