mecheng24
Mechanical
- Jan 30, 2015
- 35
I have the scenario drawn out in the attachment.
I want to find the max tensile force in the bolt. I am wondering if I can use the Case II approach in the Section “Eccentricity Normal to the Plane of the Faying Surface” in Part 7 of the Steel Construction Manual? This approach puts the NA right at the centroid of the bolt group as I have drawn.
I have 16 bolts total. But because half the bolts are in the compression block for moment in X and half the bolts are in compression for moment in Z, do I only consider 4 bolts (bolts #5,6,7,8) for this case? So uplift divided by 4 bolts, plus moment in X divided by 8 bolts, plus moment in Z divided by 8 bolts?
Or do I do uplift divided by 16 bolts and moment in X and Z divided by 8 bolts each? Or something different?
I have done an FEA on the scenario and the results are closer to the former conservative assumption.
I want to find the max tensile force in the bolt. I am wondering if I can use the Case II approach in the Section “Eccentricity Normal to the Plane of the Faying Surface” in Part 7 of the Steel Construction Manual? This approach puts the NA right at the centroid of the bolt group as I have drawn.
I have 16 bolts total. But because half the bolts are in the compression block for moment in X and half the bolts are in compression for moment in Z, do I only consider 4 bolts (bolts #5,6,7,8) for this case? So uplift divided by 4 bolts, plus moment in X divided by 8 bolts, plus moment in Z divided by 8 bolts?
Or do I do uplift divided by 16 bolts and moment in X and Z divided by 8 bolts each? Or something different?
I have done an FEA on the scenario and the results are closer to the former conservative assumption.