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Base plate stiffness

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TheMoonlitKnight

Structural
May 22, 2013
52
Is anybody aware of a US publication that has rotational stiffness criteria for base plate connections? Seems like a collaboration between AISC and ACI would be most appropriate...
 
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Check out the PCI. If I remember correctly, they go through a whole example.... at leat they did in my 5th edition.
 
That is the only place I have seen a complete procedure. It takes into account footing stiffness, bolt elongation and base plate stiffness. To tell you the truth, I wrote a spreadsheet that runs through the numbers for me and I don't necessarily like the numbers I get out on the other side (seems too stiff for me). I usually do everything I can to use a pinned base. However, in accordance with an AISC seminar I went to about 10 years ago, I will use 10% of the fully fixed case for a pinned base or 0.4EI/L which is based upon the old column K charts (using 10 for pinned instead of infinity).
 
I had a brief moment to look through the latest PCI manual and didn't see it, but I will try to find the edition you mention.

I just find it odd how so many 1 and 2-story building steel frames are built to be essentially theoretically unstable - all joints being nominally pinned. Guess that's what shear walls are for...
 
I attached the information I have on the subject.

I don't think I have ever seen a structure you have described. I have work with and for fabricators for 14 years and I have always been able to figure out how the LFRS of a structure. I don't know where you are located but I would be surprised if structures like this are being constructed in the US.

 
 http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=586bbd93-e964-470a-87a8-986ad60117bd&file=img620.pdf
why only interested in American publications? Generally there are many codes that are far more developed in the semi-rigided design than the American.

"Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning."
 
SteelPE: I don't think I expressed that properly. I was trying to differentiate between nominally pinned and the actual conditions. Thanks a bunch for the pdf!

rowing: I wanted to start with US publications firstly. I am open to others too.
 
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