Lion06
Structural
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4,238
I have always wondered this about redundancy in a system. My understanding is that the idea behind redundancy is to provide an alternate load path should a support be lost. Is this an accurate assessment?
If it is then my question is this. What exactly is the point of having redundancy in a system. It seems to me that unless you consider every scenario for which a support could be lost, you could spend way too much time figuring out alternate load paths - this seems very subjective in terms of which supports one would assume to be lost.
Also, in the case of these redundancies (say a continuous beam over let's say 3 supports) you have redundancy such that if one of the supports (columns) is lost there is an alternate load path. Here is the crux of my question. Why does this matter if the member is not robust enough to handle the load at this new span?
Every continuous member I have seen designed is around 80%-90% stressed. If you suddenly turn this 2-span (25' each) into a single span (50') or a 25' span with a 25' cant, it is likely this member is going to fail.
Is this common or do you generally consider the potential "new" loading conditions assuming a given suppport is lost? If not, is this really designing a "redundant" structure or just taking advantage of the inherent benefits of continuous beams?
If it is then my question is this. What exactly is the point of having redundancy in a system. It seems to me that unless you consider every scenario for which a support could be lost, you could spend way too much time figuring out alternate load paths - this seems very subjective in terms of which supports one would assume to be lost.
Also, in the case of these redundancies (say a continuous beam over let's say 3 supports) you have redundancy such that if one of the supports (columns) is lost there is an alternate load path. Here is the crux of my question. Why does this matter if the member is not robust enough to handle the load at this new span?
Every continuous member I have seen designed is around 80%-90% stressed. If you suddenly turn this 2-span (25' each) into a single span (50') or a 25' span with a 25' cant, it is likely this member is going to fail.
Is this common or do you generally consider the potential "new" loading conditions assuming a given suppport is lost? If not, is this really designing a "redundant" structure or just taking advantage of the inherent benefits of continuous beams?