MIKE_311
Structural
- Feb 15, 2020
- 108
So I'm more of a steel guy...
When designing prestressed concreted bridge girders, I know you want to keep the cambers of the beam pretty close. So what is the acceptable difference tolerance?
If I have:
An interior girder design the has a release camber of 2" and a final after SDL of 1/4"
The exterior girder design the has a release camber of 2" and a final after SDL of 1"
Beams are PCBT-29 with a 7'-4 1/2" spacing.
These are two independent beam runs. The deflection difference is the result of the Deck + Haunch loads in the interior and exterior beams. So before the deck hardens, the interior girder will deflect more than the exterior. Do I need to treat this like steel and pre-camber for this deflection or is 3/4" difference acceptable provided I provide enough of a haunch to accommodate it?
I can add more strands to the interior girder but I don't have enough experience with PS beams to know how much deflection difference is acceptable.
When designing prestressed concreted bridge girders, I know you want to keep the cambers of the beam pretty close. So what is the acceptable difference tolerance?
If I have:
An interior girder design the has a release camber of 2" and a final after SDL of 1/4"
The exterior girder design the has a release camber of 2" and a final after SDL of 1"
Beams are PCBT-29 with a 7'-4 1/2" spacing.
These are two independent beam runs. The deflection difference is the result of the Deck + Haunch loads in the interior and exterior beams. So before the deck hardens, the interior girder will deflect more than the exterior. Do I need to treat this like steel and pre-camber for this deflection or is 3/4" difference acceptable provided I provide enough of a haunch to accommodate it?
I can add more strands to the interior girder but I don't have enough experience with PS beams to know how much deflection difference is acceptable.