Lion06
Structural
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4,238
In digging into the nomograph for a previous thread I posted about FMC frames I happened upon another question that I am hoping I can get some opinions and insight on.
When using the nomograph to calc k (for either sway or non-sway frames), you can assume a G of 1 for a column rigidly attached to a properly design footing. My question is what exactly is a properly designed footing?
Initially, I thought it would be any footing designed to take the greatest load effects from the combinations assuming a fixed base. When I started thinking about this more, I don't necessarily agree with this anymore.
Now I think that the footing needs to be designed to take the full moment capacity of the column. My reasoning is this: as this column is loaded and reaches the point of buckling the COLUMN needs to be fixed at the base, not just be able to transfer some value of moment. It is likely that the moment it will see when buckling could exceed the moment it sees under combined gravity and lateral loads. I guess you could say that it won't see anything higher than gravity and lateral loads, but.. that is for strength, not stability. The lower moment resistance will likely allow more rotation, true?
When using the nomograph to calc k (for either sway or non-sway frames), you can assume a G of 1 for a column rigidly attached to a properly design footing. My question is what exactly is a properly designed footing?
Initially, I thought it would be any footing designed to take the greatest load effects from the combinations assuming a fixed base. When I started thinking about this more, I don't necessarily agree with this anymore.
Now I think that the footing needs to be designed to take the full moment capacity of the column. My reasoning is this: as this column is loaded and reaches the point of buckling the COLUMN needs to be fixed at the base, not just be able to transfer some value of moment. It is likely that the moment it will see when buckling could exceed the moment it sees under combined gravity and lateral loads. I guess you could say that it won't see anything higher than gravity and lateral loads, but.. that is for strength, not stability. The lower moment resistance will likely allow more rotation, true?