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Bolted Angle as Transverse Stiffener on a Built-up Girder

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waytsh

Structural
Jun 10, 2004
373
I am looking for references that address the use of bolted transverse web stiffeners as opposed to welded. We have a situation where we need to increase the web shear strength of a built-up girder and due to the material around it welding needs to be avoided. I would like to use a full depth angle with one leg bolted to the web of the girder. There are no concentrated loads and web local yielding and web local crippling are not a concern. Appreciate if anyone could point me in the right direction. Thanks!
 
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So what is the governing failure mode of the web at the moment? Web shear buckling?

I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.
 
No. You need to include the flange. If you can bolt to the flanges with fabricated tabs on the angle and develop the loads, no problem.
 
KootK, web shear buckling is controlling.

Ron - Both flanges? Some of the commentary in AISC 360-05 Section G2.2 makes it sound like it only needs to be the compression flange and then only if it is a single stiffener.
 
If you're only dealing with web shear buckling, and there are no substantial concentrated loads, then I would think that you could use bolted stiffeners to address that without connection to the flanges.

I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.
 
I agree, particularly if I am using NS/FS stiffeners. As far a required stiffener section properties I assume that is all the same. What about determining the bolt quantity and spacing to connect the angles to the web? Any idea where I might find some information on that?
 
waytsh said:
What about determining the bolt quantity and spacing to connect the angles to the web? Any idea where I might find some information on that?

I've no idea where to find info on this and I would say that it depends on how you intend to analyze it. If it were me, and it was a column type analysis, I'd forget about trying to make the angles behave compositely and just make them beefy enough that they would work as two, non-composite pieces. Then surely three bolts would do the trick. There's nothing meaningful to be gained here by economizing piece weights.

I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.
 
AASHTO has guidance for spacing bolts; when I get to work I'll post them.

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I would say that a bolted angle on only one side of the web may or may not preclude buckling of the web. A pair of angles with fully tensioned bolts, with the outstanding legs aligned, would fully stiffen the web at that point.
 
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