BT71
Mechanical
- Aug 11, 2004
- 10
Greetings,
I received a call yesterday (and I'm going to have a look later today) from a gentleman who has paid one firm to stiffen his existing joists underneath a single story kitchen by "doubling" them. And then paid another firm to add better subfloor and then ceramic tile over the top.
Tiles are now cracking.
As he described it to me on the phone, the doubling of the joists in an attempt to stiffen them was more or less on the central two-thirds of the span and perhaps not well fastened (his intent was to cover the full span and anchor thoroughly). I believe the joists are 2x10 on 16 inch centers, but my question for the forum is [blue]"Does anyone have a model, analysis, or formula for the stiffening effects of this discontinuous (in section) beam?[/blue] I just downloaded the design suite posted recently but it is more of a pure beam simulator. Suppose this home has 18 foot long joists resting on block foundation over a crawl space and the length of the doubler is only 14 feet and the location is centered -- what does the floor strain profile look like?
The owner of this property is of the opinion he wants me to add in the missing ends of the "doubling" and tie them together with some wood or metal shear plates. I'm not so sure what to do if his functional goal is to stiffen the floor to the extent the strain is below some maximum I need to think about and also that changes in strain are below some value.
I expect the first two steps are to make sure his doubling covers the area in question and then to make sure the two are well fastened together.
Approaches welcome from mathematicians and practitioners alike!
I received a call yesterday (and I'm going to have a look later today) from a gentleman who has paid one firm to stiffen his existing joists underneath a single story kitchen by "doubling" them. And then paid another firm to add better subfloor and then ceramic tile over the top.
Tiles are now cracking.
As he described it to me on the phone, the doubling of the joists in an attempt to stiffen them was more or less on the central two-thirds of the span and perhaps not well fastened (his intent was to cover the full span and anchor thoroughly). I believe the joists are 2x10 on 16 inch centers, but my question for the forum is [blue]"Does anyone have a model, analysis, or formula for the stiffening effects of this discontinuous (in section) beam?[/blue] I just downloaded the design suite posted recently but it is more of a pure beam simulator. Suppose this home has 18 foot long joists resting on block foundation over a crawl space and the length of the doubler is only 14 feet and the location is centered -- what does the floor strain profile look like?
The owner of this property is of the opinion he wants me to add in the missing ends of the "doubling" and tie them together with some wood or metal shear plates. I'm not so sure what to do if his functional goal is to stiffen the floor to the extent the strain is below some maximum I need to think about and also that changes in strain are below some value.
I expect the first two steps are to make sure his doubling covers the area in question and then to make sure the two are well fastened together.
Approaches welcome from mathematicians and practitioners alike!