Polecat
Structural
- Jul 7, 2000
- 132
Can someone explain to me the rationale behind this?
Re: AISC's LRFD, 3rd Ed. Page 16.4-29, Sect 5.1, Design Shear and Tensile Strengths
To compute the nominal strength of a bolt, the following is given:
Rn = Fa*Ab, where Ab is the FULL diameter of the shaft without considering the threads.
If one considers a 1" A325 bolt for example, the shaft area is 0.785 in2 whereas the tensile area due to the threads is only 0.606 in2, a 23% reduction in area.
Table 7-14, Page 7-35, shows the design tensile strength (phi*Rn) of a 1" bolt to be be 53 kips (with a phi of 0.75 included). Using the "nomimal area", this would relate to (53/0.785)/0.75 = 90 ksi, which is the A325 yield point.
However, under a full tensile load, it is obvious the that threads would be intersecting the plane of the load and that the actual applied stress would have be 53/0.606 = 87.4 ksi without even considering the phi factor.
So how does AISC explain the rationale or compensate for this difference? I would appreciate it if some of you with many years of structural steel experience would respond to this.
Re: AISC's LRFD, 3rd Ed. Page 16.4-29, Sect 5.1, Design Shear and Tensile Strengths
To compute the nominal strength of a bolt, the following is given:
Rn = Fa*Ab, where Ab is the FULL diameter of the shaft without considering the threads.
If one considers a 1" A325 bolt for example, the shaft area is 0.785 in2 whereas the tensile area due to the threads is only 0.606 in2, a 23% reduction in area.
Table 7-14, Page 7-35, shows the design tensile strength (phi*Rn) of a 1" bolt to be be 53 kips (with a phi of 0.75 included). Using the "nomimal area", this would relate to (53/0.785)/0.75 = 90 ksi, which is the A325 yield point.
However, under a full tensile load, it is obvious the that threads would be intersecting the plane of the load and that the actual applied stress would have be 53/0.606 = 87.4 ksi without even considering the phi factor.
So how does AISC explain the rationale or compensate for this difference? I would appreciate it if some of you with many years of structural steel experience would respond to this.