Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Pressure Coefficient for Cladding (Wind Load - National Building Code of Canada)

Status
Not open for further replies.

StrucPEng

Structural
Apr 23, 2018
95
I am working on analyzing windows in a low rise structure in Canada. My building meets all the requirements of the National Building Code of Canada wind loading code to use the combined CpCg values determined in figure I-8 of the commentary (Fig. 4.1.7.6-B of NBCC). My question arises in using the graph to determine the coefficients. The X axis of the graph is "Tributary Area" and I am not able to determine if it is the Tributary area of the section denoted by "e" or "w" or is it the tributary area of the element I am interested in, namely the area of the window in the "e" or "w" region of the building. This obviously makes a difference as my end section tributary area is ~50 sq. meters but my window is ~5 sq. meters.

I have attempted to look up worked examples but it appears that the tributary area decision is not a really well defined quantity and some examples will use 1 sq. meter to be conservative which i can do but want to avoid if possible.

Lastly, I know this this is very specific to the NBCC and the noted figures, for the Americans this is similar to Figure 30.4-1 of the ASCE 7 code.

Thanks for the help!
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

It's the tribe area of the thing you are designing. If you're designing glass is the tribe area of the glass lite you have. I generally just defer to 1m^2 unless it's a girt or column supporting a significant area.
 
So the area of the element that falls in the "e" or "w" region. Thanks Jayrod. I would like if they made that explicitly clear, but maybe its just my bad interpretation of it.
 
Oh no, you aren't the only one confused.

Check out jabacus.com. It will do the dinky little calcs for you and is more precise than reading it off a chart.
 
Wow, that site is pretty great, took about 10 seconds to get the values I spent the last hour working out in MathCAD. Thanks for the info Jayrod.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor