CQT3
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 28, 2019
- 7
Hello all, the engineering firm I work for has a structural and piping department and we design pipe racks. The piping department gave me really low seismic forces at the directional anchors. I did a quick hand calculation taking the tributary weight for the pipe for each directional anchor and multiplied it by the same seismic coefficient and the results are 4 times larger than what piping gave me. Is this normal? I understand that piping is not straight forward as taking the weight and multiplying it by the seismic coefficient but 4x seems a lot. I am just the junior engineer and I informed the engineer of record but he says to trust the pipers since they are the professionals in their field. I asked the piper about the discrepancy but he is a really old guy and essentially just said it is complicated. The software he uses is CAESAR. Are there any pipers out there that can explain to me how CAESAR works and potentially how the forces are so low? Should I take the piping forces as is or should I modify it for structural purposes?
Thanks!
Thanks!