azcats
Structural
- Oct 17, 1999
- 693
I'm working on a project for a sign. Existing sign is ~15 years old and we have the engineering that was used at the time of installation. It was built in compliance with the current code at the time.
The sign owner would like to cut down the top of the sign and install a new LED display of the same size. Finished height will remain the same.
When checking the pipe column against current wind loads It is 15-20% over-stressed. Even though the projected area and height of the sign remain unchanged, the current wind loads are greater than the previous code. Any additional gravity load is negligible as the column is primarily a flexural element.
Is invoking the exception in section 3404.4 acceptable in this situation? The demand-capacity ratio before and after the addition is the same. However, the demand-capacity ratio is 1.15-1.20 under the current code. However, we're not increasing the demand-capacity ratio into the 10% allowable. If the ratios were under 1.0 there wouldn't be a question.
Are situations like this exactly why this section is included in the code?
Thoughts welcome.
The sign owner would like to cut down the top of the sign and install a new LED display of the same size. Finished height will remain the same.
When checking the pipe column against current wind loads It is 15-20% over-stressed. Even though the projected area and height of the sign remain unchanged, the current wind loads are greater than the previous code. Any additional gravity load is negligible as the column is primarily a flexural element.
Is invoking the exception in section 3404.4 acceptable in this situation? The demand-capacity ratio before and after the addition is the same. However, the demand-capacity ratio is 1.15-1.20 under the current code. However, we're not increasing the demand-capacity ratio into the 10% allowable. If the ratios were under 1.0 there wouldn't be a question.
Are situations like this exactly why this section is included in the code?
Thoughts welcome.