Norby_acn
Structural
- Jun 26, 2019
- 13
I am working on a bit of a unique wood structure. Multiple stories, primarily storage, many wood posts carrying a fairly high load to the foundation.
I've sized the sill plate at the ground floor to not crush when carrying the load of these heavy posts. The post sizes are set in stone and cannot be altered. After a back and forth with the owner/contractor, the sill plate needs to be white oak in order to not crush, while all other wood on the project is SYP, and they've agreed to this. Now, they are coming back and wanting to adjust a few things on stories above which results in the load on the posts increasing to the point where the sill plate crushes, even as white oak.
I am aware that I can use a steel bearing plate to transmit out load a bit, and that will likely be the route I take, but as I was considering the problem, a question came to mind. Why do I care if the sill plate, bearing continuously on the top of the foundation wall "crushes"? I am aware that NDS perpendicular to grain compression values are linked to 0.04" of deformation as a limit and that the commentary states that exceeding this "does not lead to structural failure". I also do not have any brittle finishes at all to be concerned about. If the sill plate "crushes", what it is really doing is compressing a bit and the material can't really go anywhere because it is continuously bearing on concrete. So I'm wondering if this is something I am being overly concerned about.
I'm curious as to what some other, more experienced, design professionals would consider and do when facing this consideration?
Thank you for any and all advice!
I've sized the sill plate at the ground floor to not crush when carrying the load of these heavy posts. The post sizes are set in stone and cannot be altered. After a back and forth with the owner/contractor, the sill plate needs to be white oak in order to not crush, while all other wood on the project is SYP, and they've agreed to this. Now, they are coming back and wanting to adjust a few things on stories above which results in the load on the posts increasing to the point where the sill plate crushes, even as white oak.
I am aware that I can use a steel bearing plate to transmit out load a bit, and that will likely be the route I take, but as I was considering the problem, a question came to mind. Why do I care if the sill plate, bearing continuously on the top of the foundation wall "crushes"? I am aware that NDS perpendicular to grain compression values are linked to 0.04" of deformation as a limit and that the commentary states that exceeding this "does not lead to structural failure". I also do not have any brittle finishes at all to be concerned about. If the sill plate "crushes", what it is really doing is compressing a bit and the material can't really go anywhere because it is continuously bearing on concrete. So I'm wondering if this is something I am being overly concerned about.
I'm curious as to what some other, more experienced, design professionals would consider and do when facing this consideration?
Thank you for any and all advice!