dakota99
Structural
- Feb 23, 2005
- 21
I am working on a project that is going to have 4 floors of wood and a wood roof on top of a level of precast. I have just started to lay out the shear wall plan. My initial thought is to treat the diaphragm as rigid and push all of the shear into the center corridor walls and partition walls and not use the exterior walls for resisting shear since there is so many openings. The diaphragm will be ¾” T&G plywood on top of wood floor trusses at 24” o.c.. There will be ¾” of gypcrete topping and 2 layers of 5/8” gyp on the underside. The roof diaphragm will just be 5/8” OSB on wood trusses at 24” o.c. The lateral system will be controlled by wind.
I would like some input from those of you that have done this type of construction before. Am I correct in assuming a rigid diaphragm? Are the exterior walls typically ignored for shear on this type of construction? What hold down system works good for the amount of shrinkage to be expected between floors? I have attached a typical floor that shows the walls I am anticipating using for shear.
I would like some input from those of you that have done this type of construction before. Am I correct in assuming a rigid diaphragm? Are the exterior walls typically ignored for shear on this type of construction? What hold down system works good for the amount of shrinkage to be expected between floors? I have attached a typical floor that shows the walls I am anticipating using for shear.