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Seated Connection Design

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ooox

Structural
Jun 22, 2009
95
I am designing a seated connection plate to support a contunuous beam that will experience a large bending moments over the width of the support. Does anyone have any examples of the required checks for this type of support or provide any advice?

Cheers,
999
 
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I’d check the C for web crippling, applying about 60 - 70% of the total reaction (you pick), a function of unbalanced loading potential, C rotation over the reaction, etc., apply this over one of the vert. stiffeners you show. I trust you are going to bolt the C web to the col. flgs. Then ask yourself how the reaction load is really transmitted from the C to your seat connection. And, then maybe you replace your expensive seat detail with a 3/4 or 1" x (col. flg. width, less 2") x however high piece of pl. so you can get two vert welds to carry the reactions. Don’t forget to brace that torsionally unstable C section.
 
agree with dhengr, the two stifffners are a was of time and would require the flange of the UB to be braced, if the load are high.


An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made in a very narrow field
 
999>> Can I please steal your thread for a moment?

rowing>> Did you just have a thread, on Pat’s Pub, vaporized by the powers-that-be, about a week ago? You wondered (as I recall) if anyone had any ideas for improving the functioning and improving the interaction btwn. participants on any given thread. Since you and I don’t manage or have any control over this forum, I assumed you were not talking about this forum, but I thought you had started a thread that could have benefitted all, and I was sorry to see it disappear so quickly.
 
Dhengr,
Yes I did have a thread, and yes it was vaporized, however the ideas with-in were received by the powers. They seemed to take them on board.

An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made in a very narrow field
 
Rowning>> Did they indicate that they would entertain any other ideas, or do they tend to resist that kind of rebellious activity? And, thus vaporize it quickly. And, should I cease and desist before I get vaporized too. I think I remember your first item, ‘new members should wait a few days and see how things work here, before posting the first time. I remember that there were a few more posts, and I thought it had the potential of being a meaningful thread. I started my list, and when I went back it was gone. Did you actually have some favorable communication with them and/or do they frown on these types of suggestions?

I’m fairly new at this forum thing, although much less new at engineering, since I have been running my own consulting engineering firm since 1977; and 10 years before that I left Grad School and had two jobs in the interim. I find this forum, the whole gamut, quite interesting: many times enlightening because of the range of questions and of how others look at the same issues; sometimes frustrating for the poorly thought out questions and lack of info. which might lead to a meaningful discussion; many times fairly time consuming because I just don’t have many quick answers (glib or quick & dirty) to complex problems. I think I could really enjoy picking a few young people here and mentoring them or working with them on a closer level, on their questions and problems. That would be far more meaningful to me than a hundred questions, all kinda quick and dirty, and then another question, and you never really hear about the final results or outcome.
 
nineninenine,

Why are you trying to transfer the moment into the column? Can't the moments on each side of the column be balanced?

DaveAtkins
 
I don't understand what you mean by "there is a large bending moment over the width of the support". As the channel web is against the beam flange, why not just bolt them together?
 
I like hokie66's idea, the moment is in the channel not the column.
 
Are you trying to transfer moment into the column for lateral stability (i.e. creating a framed structure).

To transfer moment into the column you need to engage the flanges of the channel. A seated connection detailed the way you have it will not transfer moment into to the column.

When I first started out, I detailed seated connections because I felt it was a more positive bearing-type connections. For your design, I would detail 4-bolts thru the web of the channel fixing to the flange of the column and would not try transfer moment from the channel to the column.
 
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