vickings99
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 2, 2010
- 5
Hi!
My name is Vicky and I am a civil engineer.
Staad is very new for me although I used to work on other Structural programs and I have a few problems that I had not came across in the past. One of them is the following:
I have a main beam and I want to create five secondary ones being supported on the former one. When I just added new nodes on the main one and I created the secondary ones, my results were full of instabilities since - as I found out later - the created intersections (between main and secondary beams) are considered to be UNJOINTED.
So, what I did was to divide/break my main beams into smaller ones at the intersection points that I wanted. My model was then working just fine. However, I find this phenomenon very unpractical for things like adding point loads to the main beam, getting bending moments, shear forces and deflection values for it and so on.
I then thought that another way would be to leave the main beam as it is and then assign/apply supports to the intersection points so that Staad "understands" that the nodes are really joints between the members.
I would be very grateful if someone could advice me on the issue and tell me what they think as at the end I am not sure at all which method is the correct one, which one is better and if there is any other method in front of my nose that I dont see...
Thank you very much in advance.
My name is Vicky and I am a civil engineer.
Staad is very new for me although I used to work on other Structural programs and I have a few problems that I had not came across in the past. One of them is the following:
I have a main beam and I want to create five secondary ones being supported on the former one. When I just added new nodes on the main one and I created the secondary ones, my results were full of instabilities since - as I found out later - the created intersections (between main and secondary beams) are considered to be UNJOINTED.
So, what I did was to divide/break my main beams into smaller ones at the intersection points that I wanted. My model was then working just fine. However, I find this phenomenon very unpractical for things like adding point loads to the main beam, getting bending moments, shear forces and deflection values for it and so on.
I then thought that another way would be to leave the main beam as it is and then assign/apply supports to the intersection points so that Staad "understands" that the nodes are really joints between the members.
I would be very grateful if someone could advice me on the issue and tell me what they think as at the end I am not sure at all which method is the correct one, which one is better and if there is any other method in front of my nose that I dont see...
Thank you very much in advance.