jvvse
Structural
- Mar 21, 2014
- 52
Would anyone like to help educate me on the concept of cross-grain bending? I've known, and avoided, only 2 cases where this might occur:
1) A wood diaphragm is nailed to a wood ledger, which is bolted to a concrete/CMU wall. If the wall tries to pull away from the diaphragm, the anchor bolts will produce cross-grain bending in the ledger.
2) A wood framed shear wall has no hold downs and so uses the sill bolts for uplift resistance. As the wall and sill plate try to lift, the bolts holding them down will produce cross-grain bending in the sill plate.
I have searched the web, searched this site, and talked to other engineers, but haven't found anything other than these 2 cases. I feel like if I ever have tension on a bolt through the weak axis of a wood member, I'm going to have cross grain bending. Yet somehow wood members are OK being used in weak axis bending. Confusing!
I appreciate any help.
1) A wood diaphragm is nailed to a wood ledger, which is bolted to a concrete/CMU wall. If the wall tries to pull away from the diaphragm, the anchor bolts will produce cross-grain bending in the ledger.
2) A wood framed shear wall has no hold downs and so uses the sill bolts for uplift resistance. As the wall and sill plate try to lift, the bolts holding them down will produce cross-grain bending in the sill plate.
I have searched the web, searched this site, and talked to other engineers, but haven't found anything other than these 2 cases. I feel like if I ever have tension on a bolt through the weak axis of a wood member, I'm going to have cross grain bending. Yet somehow wood members are OK being used in weak axis bending. Confusing!
I appreciate any help.