jechols
Structural
- Jan 21, 2004
- 109
I have been checking some existing joists to see if can add a concentrated load. The size of the load is known, just not its exact location on the joist. I decided to put the point load in the center to produce the largest moment and then backed out the equivalent uniform load to compare to the joist tables. Then I applied the load at the end of the joist to determine the maximum shear and backed out the uniform load again for comparison to the joist load tables. I realized after a couple of these calculations that I was coming up with the same equivalent uniform load for worst moment and worst shear for moving point load. Here are the equations:
Worst Moment - point load in the center
w = (P*L/4)*8/L^2 = 2*P/L
Worst Shear - point near support
w = 2*P/L
I am missing something? It just doesn't seem correct. I can accept the math just having trouble with the concept. According to this all I need to do is multiply the point load by 2 and divide by the joist span and then add the resulting line load to the existing loads, compare to the joist load table and if the new load is less than the load listed in the table, the joist is adequate. I realize that some of the web members may be smaller in the center than the ends. Lets assume the joist has a constant cross section and local bending of chord members is not an issue, like a w-shape beam. Am I correct that doing this checks worst moment and worst shear of a moving point load in one calculation?
Thanks for any input
Worst Moment - point load in the center
w = (P*L/4)*8/L^2 = 2*P/L
Worst Shear - point near support
w = 2*P/L
I am missing something? It just doesn't seem correct. I can accept the math just having trouble with the concept. According to this all I need to do is multiply the point load by 2 and divide by the joist span and then add the resulting line load to the existing loads, compare to the joist load table and if the new load is less than the load listed in the table, the joist is adequate. I realize that some of the web members may be smaller in the center than the ends. Lets assume the joist has a constant cross section and local bending of chord members is not an issue, like a w-shape beam. Am I correct that doing this checks worst moment and worst shear of a moving point load in one calculation?
Thanks for any input