David Deck Guy
Structural
- Aug 18, 2023
- 34
First, I need to buy an old 1950s textbook on reinforced concrete so I can figure out what sort of design considerations these guys, or women, were making.
More immediately important though, I'm having trouble getting a 1950s building to pencil out for some new loads. The beams I'm looking at have typical truss bars, bending at about the quarter points, as well as bottom bars that go all the way across. Some of the beams have top bars as well, but the top bars typically only go as far the quarter points.
Here is my issue. My beams are failing at the location of the bend. One obvious option is to try to reinforce the beams, maybe with FRP or channels on each side. But my question to eng tips is can I just let the beam fail at this location and model it as a pin, basically just forcing the inflection point where the original designers probably expected it to be?
More immediately important though, I'm having trouble getting a 1950s building to pencil out for some new loads. The beams I'm looking at have typical truss bars, bending at about the quarter points, as well as bottom bars that go all the way across. Some of the beams have top bars as well, but the top bars typically only go as far the quarter points.
Here is my issue. My beams are failing at the location of the bend. One obvious option is to try to reinforce the beams, maybe with FRP or channels on each side. But my question to eng tips is can I just let the beam fail at this location and model it as a pin, basically just forcing the inflection point where the original designers probably expected it to be?