Blooongeey
Structural
- Jul 3, 2021
- 20
In my high-end residential applications here by the beaches of southern CA, I typically try to keep deflections of longer spanning floor beams at 0.50" TL maximum. Typical spans I see are around 20 to 26'. I see a lot of these doors, typically 12 - 18' wide, for which I typically tighten the deflections down to 0.25", or less.
A current design in the works calls for a 40' wide door. Loads tributary to the beam are 12' of roof and 15' of floor over the full span. I do not believe 0.25", or even 0.50" is a reasonable limit for this application. The architect has provided approximately 24" for the header depth and the deflection of the header. My initial stab at this resulted in a W18x119, with 1.16"/0.60" TL/LL deflections. I could call out cambering to take out the DL deflection, but am not sure this is necessary, or even achievable.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated,
Michel Blangy, P.E.
Redondo Beach
A current design in the works calls for a 40' wide door. Loads tributary to the beam are 12' of roof and 15' of floor over the full span. I do not believe 0.25", or even 0.50" is a reasonable limit for this application. The architect has provided approximately 24" for the header depth and the deflection of the header. My initial stab at this resulted in a W18x119, with 1.16"/0.60" TL/LL deflections. I could call out cambering to take out the DL deflection, but am not sure this is necessary, or even achievable.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated,
Michel Blangy, P.E.
Redondo Beach