EngDM
Structural
- Aug 10, 2021
- 389
Hey all,
A detail I have seen quite often for non-structural steel stud framing is to have a single inverted track run across the opening as the header. However, these tracks have an insanely low Iy (weak axis) so I'm curious how it's justified to carry the gravity load from the wall above; even if it is just like 2 layers of drywall.
On a similar note, for load bearing steel stud walls I'd imagine if the point load occured midway between two studs the top track would fail in the weak axis before the studs do, yet I rarely see studs called up to align with joists/loading members above. If the wall is sheathed then maybe I could see it being able to spread the load out to the studs, but just drywall? I have a hard time accepting that.
A detail I have seen quite often for non-structural steel stud framing is to have a single inverted track run across the opening as the header. However, these tracks have an insanely low Iy (weak axis) so I'm curious how it's justified to carry the gravity load from the wall above; even if it is just like 2 layers of drywall.
On a similar note, for load bearing steel stud walls I'd imagine if the point load occured midway between two studs the top track would fail in the weak axis before the studs do, yet I rarely see studs called up to align with joists/loading members above. If the wall is sheathed then maybe I could see it being able to spread the load out to the studs, but just drywall? I have a hard time accepting that.