WoodDesignCat
Civil/Environmental
- May 26, 2016
- 32
Most of my experience is from building design, where there are well defined safety factors and design stresses to use for steel based on ASD and LRFD design forces. After a career change I am now creating in house destructive tests for wood components, which sometimes include metal plates and welded connections. When I do testing I'm just trying to prove our design works correctly before sending our products out for official testing. Depending on what type of system we test, the tested ultimate failure load gets reduced by between 2.1 to 2.5 times for the usable ASD design capacity.
When I design metal components that get used with our wood products I would like to design them without a safety factor, because they will get the 2.1 to 2.5 safety factor added on. Lets say I'm designed a metal plate in bending and shear, should I just be using the ultimate tensile strength and shear modulus without any factors added on, or are there safety factors built into the ultimate tensile strength and shear modulus for steel? I haven't tried designing a weld without safety factors, but is there anything I should be careful of?
When I design metal components that get used with our wood products I would like to design them without a safety factor, because they will get the 2.1 to 2.5 safety factor added on. Lets say I'm designed a metal plate in bending and shear, should I just be using the ultimate tensile strength and shear modulus without any factors added on, or are there safety factors built into the ultimate tensile strength and shear modulus for steel? I haven't tried designing a weld without safety factors, but is there anything I should be careful of?