NZtoUSA
Geotechnical
- Apr 10, 2019
- 2
I'm curious why the unified hazard tool PGAs I'm getting are 0.05g smaller than those from AASHTO or my state seismic tool. There really is no good explanation on the USGS, except to say that they are different so you shouldn't use the UHT... Anyone have an idea why? Are they disregarding some models for the design spec for some reason?
from the "Unified Hazard Tool" page:
"Please do not use this tool to obtain ground motion parameter values for the design code reference documents covered by the U.S. Seismic Design Maps web tools (e.g., the International Building Code and the ASCE 7 or 41 Standard). The values returned by the two applications are not identical."
from the "USGS design ground motions" page
"The USGS collaborates with organizations that develop building codes (for buildings, bridges, and other structures) to make seismic design parameter values available to engineers. The design code developers first decide how USGS earthquake hazard information should be applied in design practice. Then, the USGS calculates values of seismic design parameters based on USGS hazard values and in accordance with design code procedures."
from the "Unified Hazard Tool" page:
"Please do not use this tool to obtain ground motion parameter values for the design code reference documents covered by the U.S. Seismic Design Maps web tools (e.g., the International Building Code and the ASCE 7 or 41 Standard). The values returned by the two applications are not identical."
from the "USGS design ground motions" page
"The USGS collaborates with organizations that develop building codes (for buildings, bridges, and other structures) to make seismic design parameter values available to engineers. The design code developers first decide how USGS earthquake hazard information should be applied in design practice. Then, the USGS calculates values of seismic design parameters based on USGS hazard values and in accordance with design code procedures."