IngDod
Structural
- Apr 13, 2013
- 98
Greetings,
I am trying to design a shear connection between an hss beam and an hss column, the limiting issue in this case is that the beam is framing into the wide face of a 260x90mm column, so any force acting perpendicularly to the wide face of the column is bound to cause some troubles as the wall is slender. My initial solution was to use a pair of angles, each connected to each web of the beam; which is similar to the connections used for I-shaped beams and I believe the behavior should be very similar and has the added bonus of taking the forces close to the sidewalls of the column. However I have found a problem.. AISC uses angles with legs of 4" and 3".. and a 3" angle wont fit in this case... I would need to use a 2" angle.. however I know that this is exactly the sort of thing that could affect the rotation of the connection. My question is: Is there a way to ascertain wether the reduced leg size of the angle still works as a shear connection? This is for a relatively light load of 6.6kips.... According to my calculations it would still work with ample capacity.. but I do not know if a certain degree of fixity will creep in.
I have thought of other solutions.. such as welding a reinforcing plate to the column and directly welding the beam to the plate.. which would be a semi-rigid connection. But I much rather keep any moment away from the columns. I also thought of using an angle seat.. but given that the beam is narrow (70mm) I would be putting most of the force at the center of the column wide face.. which will probably come back and bite me in the ass when the beam carries any kind of axial force. Also... I just remembered that the 260x90 column has 260x90 beams framing in the perpendicular direction... so in theory I could use 3" or 4" angles and weld this angles at the webs of this beams... this a very non-standard connection but it takes all the load away from the wide face of the column which is my main concern.
Thanks, and I hope i made some sense.
Thanks.
I am trying to design a shear connection between an hss beam and an hss column, the limiting issue in this case is that the beam is framing into the wide face of a 260x90mm column, so any force acting perpendicularly to the wide face of the column is bound to cause some troubles as the wall is slender. My initial solution was to use a pair of angles, each connected to each web of the beam; which is similar to the connections used for I-shaped beams and I believe the behavior should be very similar and has the added bonus of taking the forces close to the sidewalls of the column. However I have found a problem.. AISC uses angles with legs of 4" and 3".. and a 3" angle wont fit in this case... I would need to use a 2" angle.. however I know that this is exactly the sort of thing that could affect the rotation of the connection. My question is: Is there a way to ascertain wether the reduced leg size of the angle still works as a shear connection? This is for a relatively light load of 6.6kips.... According to my calculations it would still work with ample capacity.. but I do not know if a certain degree of fixity will creep in.
I have thought of other solutions.. such as welding a reinforcing plate to the column and directly welding the beam to the plate.. which would be a semi-rigid connection. But I much rather keep any moment away from the columns. I also thought of using an angle seat.. but given that the beam is narrow (70mm) I would be putting most of the force at the center of the column wide face.. which will probably come back and bite me in the ass when the beam carries any kind of axial force. Also... I just remembered that the 260x90 column has 260x90 beams framing in the perpendicular direction... so in theory I could use 3" or 4" angles and weld this angles at the webs of this beams... this a very non-standard connection but it takes all the load away from the wide face of the column which is my main concern.
Thanks, and I hope i made some sense.
Thanks.