CrabbyT
Structural
- Feb 12, 2019
- 165
I'm working on a project where a girder for an existing equipment platform is bolstered by a knee brace. The knee brace was supposed to be a 2L 2.5×2.5×0.25 angle. They only installed it as a single angle.
Under full design load, the angle fails but the girder has a stress ratio around 0.5.
If I delete the angle, the girder still passes, but the stress ratio is around 0.97.
In either case, it's not an issue because the girder passes strength checks, but it raised some questions.
How much strength does an overstressed member contribute to the system?
Is it possible (or permissible by code) to consider strength contributions from overstressed steel?
In reality, my belief is that if the knee brace failed in compression, it might buckle but it would still contribute strength. Or maybe the forces would redistribute once the angle reached its Euler buckling limit. I appreciate that RISA 3D includes Euler buckling as an axial member condition; this feature isn't in Bentley RAM. Maybe I could model the knee brace as a spring. I dunno. What do you all think?
Under full design load, the angle fails but the girder has a stress ratio around 0.5.
If I delete the angle, the girder still passes, but the stress ratio is around 0.97.
In either case, it's not an issue because the girder passes strength checks, but it raised some questions.
How much strength does an overstressed member contribute to the system?
Is it possible (or permissible by code) to consider strength contributions from overstressed steel?
In reality, my belief is that if the knee brace failed in compression, it might buckle but it would still contribute strength. Or maybe the forces would redistribute once the angle reached its Euler buckling limit. I appreciate that RISA 3D includes Euler buckling as an axial member condition; this feature isn't in Bentley RAM. Maybe I could model the knee brace as a spring. I dunno. What do you all think?