EDub24
Structural
- Mar 8, 2016
- 185
Hi, I'm working on a project under construction rehabbing an existing externally wrapped post-tensioned concrete tank that was built in the '60's. The Contractor has submitted a pipe support design that's basically a cantilever steel beam support off the existing 10" thick concrete core wall (pipe is on the interior of the tank). The wall has minimal reinforcement (likely shrinkage only) and does not have much moment capacity at all. We did testing of the structure during the design phase and found the concrete strength to be in excess of 6000 psi and the steel yield strength to be 44 ksi. Is there a way to determine the effective width of the wall that would resist the moment from the beam support? So if the support has a moment of 20 kip-ft and we use a 2' strip that comes down to 10 kip-ft/ft of wall.
My preference is to have the Contractor provide some type of kicker support so that there is no moment transfer from the support into the wall but I want a backup plan in case I get push back from the Contractor.
My preference is to have the Contractor provide some type of kicker support so that there is no moment transfer from the support into the wall but I want a backup plan in case I get push back from the Contractor.