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135 degree hook

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WARose

Structural
Mar 17, 2011
5,594
I got a situation where (because of space) I need a 135 degree hook (instead of a 180) to develop a bar. (The bar will hook around a bar going in the other direction.)

Will this develop like ACI's "standard" hook (i.e. 90 and 180)? I ask because I've only used the 135 in a torsion or seismic application.

Seems like I saw something about this in a non-USA code once.....but cannot remember.

Thanks.
 
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WARose said:
Will this develop like ACI's "standard" hook (i.e. 90 and 180)?

Surely. I'd give it the extension length of whichever normal arrangement is longer if they are different.
 
THanks Kootk. It seems logical (considering the other uses....but the code isn't real explicit in that regard.
 
Yes. We always specify 135 degree hooks for ties in circular columns.
 
For my info only, a 180 hook is very clear. But is a 135 only a partial curve (more open) or a more complete curve (more closed) than a 180?
 
racookpe, it's more open - halfway between a 90 degree hook (which is an "L" shape) and a 180 degree hook.
 
I think that’s feasible. If you think about it, the standard hook lengths for a stirrup or tie is the same as a regular standard hook. The only difference is for smaller bars (#3-#5) where the lengths are respectively smaller.
 
If it helps at all Australian Code says to treat it the same as a 180° bend for development length which is 3x bar diameter bend radius + 4x bar diameter extension.
 
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