dcmiles
Structural
- Jun 30, 2022
- 8
Hi, I am a fairly new Structural EIT (<4 months on the job) at a small design firm in Ontario, Canada. I am the only engineer in the office (my superior works remotely) and I am using a different FEA software as RISA has a connection to Revit -- which is what the designers here use.
I like RISA 3D for the most part but I am frustrated by the deflection analysis that it is capable of. As far as I can tell, it will only give you an absolute deflection diagram and NO relative deflection diagram considering the support conditions. The latter seems like the most relevant for code design while absolute deflection is useful contextually.
I know you can adjust the support conditions (cantilever and supported ends) in which the program will divide the beam into 'spans' and calculate the deflection ratios of each span, displayed in the Member Deflections spreadsheet. This only seems to work, though, when the spans are broken up by vertical support members (columns).
In our projects -- namely unique high-end boathouses and cottages -- we often have conditions where long spans are hung onto the ends of cantilevered beams, and column point loads will strike from the top. RISA 3D ends up dividing up these beams at the 'vertical supports', which are actually point loads, and gives inappropriate deflections ratios.
I'm wondering if other users have come across problems like this and how they managed to get around it. RISA support literally told me to use a different software until they 'improved the software's behaviour', but if someone had found any kind of workaround which would prevent me from having to learn yet another software I would be VERY grateful for the wisdom. Deflection usually governs our designs and I have been floundering trying to make working designs with this (what I would consider) a HUGE design flaw of the software. Moment capacity, shear capacity, and deflection criteria are the holy trinity of structural design and I never in a million years would have thought that a major software would be lacking in any one of these :S
Signed,
Halp!
I like RISA 3D for the most part but I am frustrated by the deflection analysis that it is capable of. As far as I can tell, it will only give you an absolute deflection diagram and NO relative deflection diagram considering the support conditions. The latter seems like the most relevant for code design while absolute deflection is useful contextually.
I know you can adjust the support conditions (cantilever and supported ends) in which the program will divide the beam into 'spans' and calculate the deflection ratios of each span, displayed in the Member Deflections spreadsheet. This only seems to work, though, when the spans are broken up by vertical support members (columns).
In our projects -- namely unique high-end boathouses and cottages -- we often have conditions where long spans are hung onto the ends of cantilevered beams, and column point loads will strike from the top. RISA 3D ends up dividing up these beams at the 'vertical supports', which are actually point loads, and gives inappropriate deflections ratios.
I'm wondering if other users have come across problems like this and how they managed to get around it. RISA support literally told me to use a different software until they 'improved the software's behaviour', but if someone had found any kind of workaround which would prevent me from having to learn yet another software I would be VERY grateful for the wisdom. Deflection usually governs our designs and I have been floundering trying to make working designs with this (what I would consider) a HUGE design flaw of the software. Moment capacity, shear capacity, and deflection criteria are the holy trinity of structural design and I never in a million years would have thought that a major software would be lacking in any one of these :S
Signed,
Halp!