pyseng
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 9, 2013
- 16
I am not trying to start another LRFD vs ASD discussion here. But I was just wondering if anyone can either validate my problem or offer any insight that might help me make better sense of this issue. I have reached out to the ASCE committee on this issue but they didn't seem to quite understand what I was talking about.
As given in the title the crux of my issue revolves around LRFD Combination 3... specifically, the 0.5 W term.
If we take a quick step back and look at the ASD combinations, we find that we can categorize them as follows (ignoring Lr and R for simplicity):
GRAVITY EFFECTS:
LATERAL EFFECTS:
COMBINED EFFECTS:
I find the ASD to be rather elegant and straightforward. And as a designer of low rise structures in Northeast US, I like how snow drift only appears in COMBO 3 (when snow is the primary load effect). This allows me to deal with snow drift in a more localized, conservative manner. And it makes my modelling effort much more simple and I have more confidence in the results. If you ever tried to explicitly define snow drift loads in RAM on a building with multiple low/high roof transitions, parapets, and roof projections, you will know what I mean. In my opinion, the way ASD is setup sort of leads you down this path of thinking of snow drift like a sort of "components and cladding" load effect, one that needs to be applied to some elements, but not taken through the structure. I may or may not be wrong about that, but that is my own sort of engineering judgement way of thinking that I think applies in 98% of cases. At the very least, it certainly allows you to neglect snow drift in a separate lateral system model, which in and of itself is nice.
Now... let's try to do the same categorization for LRFD.
GRAVITY EFFECTS:
LATERAL EFFECTS:
This is actually pretty nice, looks like the consolidated a little actually... they got rid of the dead + lateral cases. Also, notice how snow drift is only required in COMBO 3, again, because snow is the primary load effect. But wait... wh... (L or 0.5 W)? What is that lateral load case doing there? How am I supposed to CHOOSE between L or W? They are two different load effects. I would understand better if this was split into two cases... 3a. 1.2 D + 1.6 S* + L AND 3b. 1.2 D + 1.6 S* + 0.5 W. Or maybe if they stipulated that that W term is only components and cladding wind... that way it sort of acts like a gravity load. But what I hate most is that this ONE term means that I can no longer create a separate lateral system model and keep snow drift out of it.
Am I right or missing something? I know I can get a bit winded in my rants, but if there was a better way to explain this too, that would be helpful to send over to the committee again.
Thank you!
As given in the title the crux of my issue revolves around LRFD Combination 3... specifically, the 0.5 W term.
If we take a quick step back and look at the ASD combinations, we find that we can categorize them as follows (ignoring Lr and R for simplicity):
GRAVITY EFFECTS:
1. D
2. D + L
3. D + S* (*snow plus drift)
4. D + 0.75 L + 0.75 S
LATERAL EFFECTS:
5. D + (0.6 W or 0.7 E)
7. 0.6 D + 0.6 W
8. 0.6 D + 0.7 E
COMBINED EFFECTS:
6a. D + 0.75 L + 0.75 (0.6 W) + 0.75 S
6b. D + 0.75 L + 0.75 (0.7 E) + 0.75 S
I find the ASD to be rather elegant and straightforward. And as a designer of low rise structures in Northeast US, I like how snow drift only appears in COMBO 3 (when snow is the primary load effect). This allows me to deal with snow drift in a more localized, conservative manner. And it makes my modelling effort much more simple and I have more confidence in the results. If you ever tried to explicitly define snow drift loads in RAM on a building with multiple low/high roof transitions, parapets, and roof projections, you will know what I mean. In my opinion, the way ASD is setup sort of leads you down this path of thinking of snow drift like a sort of "components and cladding" load effect, one that needs to be applied to some elements, but not taken through the structure. I may or may not be wrong about that, but that is my own sort of engineering judgement way of thinking that I think applies in 98% of cases. At the very least, it certainly allows you to neglect snow drift in a separate lateral system model, which in and of itself is nice.
Now... let's try to do the same categorization for LRFD.
GRAVITY EFFECTS:
1. 1.4 D
2. 1.2 D + 1.6 L + 0.5 S
3. 1.2 D + 1.6 S* + (L or 0.5 W) (*snow plus drift)
LATERAL EFFECTS:
4. 1.2 D + 1.0 W + L + 0.5 S
5. 1.2 D + 1.0 E + L + 0.2 S
6. 0.9 D + 1.0 W
7. 0.9 D + 1.0 E
This is actually pretty nice, looks like the consolidated a little actually... they got rid of the dead + lateral cases. Also, notice how snow drift is only required in COMBO 3, again, because snow is the primary load effect. But wait... wh... (L or 0.5 W)? What is that lateral load case doing there? How am I supposed to CHOOSE between L or W? They are two different load effects. I would understand better if this was split into two cases... 3a. 1.2 D + 1.6 S* + L AND 3b. 1.2 D + 1.6 S* + 0.5 W. Or maybe if they stipulated that that W term is only components and cladding wind... that way it sort of acts like a gravity load. But what I hate most is that this ONE term means that I can no longer create a separate lateral system model and keep snow drift out of it.
Am I right or missing something? I know I can get a bit winded in my rants, but if there was a better way to explain this too, that would be helpful to send over to the committee again.
Thank you!