jdgengineer
Structural
- Dec 1, 2011
- 747
I wanted to see how people are addressing the ACI 318-19 provision which no longer allows reductions in hooked development length based on excess steel. Two examples we commonly run across are on residential cantilevered retaining walls where forces can be somewhat significant, and with temperature and shrinkage steel at wall corners.
Where steel reinforcing demand is not directly quantified (say T&S steel) are you putting in reduced hooks and ignoring the provision as the demand is very small?
Where steel reinforcing demand is quantified (say at the interface between the stem and footing of a retaining wall), what are you doing? Really thick footings if steel reinforcing exceeds #5 or #6 bars? I know an alternate (and perhaps a more justifiable approach) is to use the strut and tie method utilizing curved-bar nodes to determine the radius of the bend that is required for the compression strut to develop the tension steel. However, this often leads to a radius that exceeds a standard bar bend. We could specify a higher radius, but for a residential project I'm not sure how likely it is that it will actually be installed that way.
How would you get this joint to calc for a column supporting a thin flat slab with minimal demands on the hooked dowels?
Where steel reinforcing demand is not directly quantified (say T&S steel) are you putting in reduced hooks and ignoring the provision as the demand is very small?
Where steel reinforcing demand is quantified (say at the interface between the stem and footing of a retaining wall), what are you doing? Really thick footings if steel reinforcing exceeds #5 or #6 bars? I know an alternate (and perhaps a more justifiable approach) is to use the strut and tie method utilizing curved-bar nodes to determine the radius of the bend that is required for the compression strut to develop the tension steel. However, this often leads to a radius that exceeds a standard bar bend. We could specify a higher radius, but for a residential project I'm not sure how likely it is that it will actually be installed that way.
How would you get this joint to calc for a column supporting a thin flat slab with minimal demands on the hooked dowels?