OUe
Structural
- Feb 14, 2007
- 47
Hello all,
I am new to designing with wood construction. I am a PE and consider myself at a reasonable knowledge of designing the theoretical applications of wood structures. However, there are a few things that I'm still concerned about at my place of employment: there are times when other structural engineers decide to neglect/ignore a small wall projection of say 4'-0" or less. The reason I'm concerned is because they seem to never use a drag strut to force the shear in the wall with the inner dimension - not to mention the fact that the rigidities of the walls will be vastly different thereby creating a thrust in a diaphragm that was never designed to take the load.
Has anyone else used a personal criteria for when to determine when to use a dragstrut in a discontinuous wall? This is something in residential design that I've seen ignored quite often, and I'm concerned because it wouldn't pass in theory.
Thoughts?
OUe
I am new to designing with wood construction. I am a PE and consider myself at a reasonable knowledge of designing the theoretical applications of wood structures. However, there are a few things that I'm still concerned about at my place of employment: there are times when other structural engineers decide to neglect/ignore a small wall projection of say 4'-0" or less. The reason I'm concerned is because they seem to never use a drag strut to force the shear in the wall with the inner dimension - not to mention the fact that the rigidities of the walls will be vastly different thereby creating a thrust in a diaphragm that was never designed to take the load.
Has anyone else used a personal criteria for when to determine when to use a dragstrut in a discontinuous wall? This is something in residential design that I've seen ignored quite often, and I'm concerned because it wouldn't pass in theory.
Thoughts?
OUe