Althalus
Structural
- Jan 21, 2003
- 151
My team was given a cryptic message about our design from the design manager. And we won't be able to discuss with him for another day.
Design:
[ul]
[li]Concrete beam: 4ft x 3ft(H x W) with a 70ft clear span.[/li]
[li]30kip load hanging down from an embed plate at the bottom of the beam.[/li]
[li]Embedment uses Nelson D2L anchors.[/li]
[/ul]
He said that there is a problem with using a tension anchor at the bottom of a beam because they (D2L bars) didn't have heads (like the Nelson studs have). It had to do with the breakout cone on the tension side of the beam.
What further confused us was that he didn't say it had anything to do with the tension capacity of the anchor. But it was about the shear and bending reinforcement in the beam itself. Then he left. We were trying to figure out what he meant by all that.
Anyone have a clue what he was talking about? I want to be prepared for that meeting tomorrow.
Design:
[ul]
[li]Concrete beam: 4ft x 3ft(H x W) with a 70ft clear span.[/li]
[li]30kip load hanging down from an embed plate at the bottom of the beam.[/li]
[li]Embedment uses Nelson D2L anchors.[/li]
[/ul]
He said that there is a problem with using a tension anchor at the bottom of a beam because they (D2L bars) didn't have heads (like the Nelson studs have). It had to do with the breakout cone on the tension side of the beam.
What further confused us was that he didn't say it had anything to do with the tension capacity of the anchor. But it was about the shear and bending reinforcement in the beam itself. Then he left. We were trying to figure out what he meant by all that.
Anyone have a clue what he was talking about? I want to be prepared for that meeting tomorrow.