nicomachus
Structural
- May 1, 2016
- 1
Hello all:
I am trying to teach myself LFRD steel design from an outdated textbook and came across block shear in the chapter about tension members. Sorry if this is a little obvious, but I am new to this. The section about block shear repeats from the AISC manual section J4.3, equation J4-3a: (phi)*Rn = (phi)[0.6*Fy*Agv + Fu*Ant] & equation J4-3b: (phi)*Rn = (phi)[0.6*Fu*Anv + Fy*Agt]. Now, I get that the sum of the strengths of the shear surface and the tension surface will contribute to the total resistance, but what I don't understand is why gross areas are being considered at all. My understanding is that gross areas are the "full" area under consideration and omits holes. So for example, it is used to determine the yielding limit state of a simple bar which occurs in the middle of the bar before it occurs in the area where holes are (obviously you would use the cross section of the bar perpendicular to the load for Ag, it's not the orientation of the gross area that is confusing me). But in the case of block shear, failure will occur along the bolt holes, so why use a gross area that omits them in determining the resistance to block shear? They just kinda declare that this is the equation you should use from the AISC manual and then go on to an example. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
I am trying to teach myself LFRD steel design from an outdated textbook and came across block shear in the chapter about tension members. Sorry if this is a little obvious, but I am new to this. The section about block shear repeats from the AISC manual section J4.3, equation J4-3a: (phi)*Rn = (phi)[0.6*Fy*Agv + Fu*Ant] & equation J4-3b: (phi)*Rn = (phi)[0.6*Fu*Anv + Fy*Agt]. Now, I get that the sum of the strengths of the shear surface and the tension surface will contribute to the total resistance, but what I don't understand is why gross areas are being considered at all. My understanding is that gross areas are the "full" area under consideration and omits holes. So for example, it is used to determine the yielding limit state of a simple bar which occurs in the middle of the bar before it occurs in the area where holes are (obviously you would use the cross section of the bar perpendicular to the load for Ag, it's not the orientation of the gross area that is confusing me). But in the case of block shear, failure will occur along the bolt holes, so why use a gross area that omits them in determining the resistance to block shear? They just kinda declare that this is the equation you should use from the AISC manual and then go on to an example. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!