Struct123ure
Structural
- May 16, 2023
- 40
Hi,
Cambering a structural member simply masks deflection from the viewers eyes OR after cambering a member can we subtract the camber from the deflection requirements?
I have seen both approached such as “purpose of camber is to mask deflection, it does not reduce the total deflection” pg3 NRC research see attached paper; and have seen the opposite argued in for instance this thread (Link).
To highlight the difference between the two approached:
1. Masks deflection: means you have a member which you calculated the SW+SDL+LL deflection as 3”< L/240=3.1”. Deflection passes code requirement but it’s ugly because the client wants a flat floor. You camber 2” and now only have 1” as LL deflection that can be visibly seen.
2. Mitigate/reduce deflection: means you have SW+SDL+LL deflection as 3”> L/240=2.5”. You camber 2” our now you have 1” deflection left which is < L/240=2.5”.
Cambering a structural member simply masks deflection from the viewers eyes OR after cambering a member can we subtract the camber from the deflection requirements?
I have seen both approached such as “purpose of camber is to mask deflection, it does not reduce the total deflection” pg3 NRC research see attached paper; and have seen the opposite argued in for instance this thread (Link).
To highlight the difference between the two approached:
1. Masks deflection: means you have a member which you calculated the SW+SDL+LL deflection as 3”< L/240=3.1”. Deflection passes code requirement but it’s ugly because the client wants a flat floor. You camber 2” and now only have 1” as LL deflection that can be visibly seen.
2. Mitigate/reduce deflection: means you have SW+SDL+LL deflection as 3”> L/240=2.5”. You camber 2” our now you have 1” deflection left which is < L/240=2.5”.