grogannc
Structural
- Jan 21, 2014
- 63
I have a residential project where the elevated back patio (~5 ft) is supported by steel bar joists and decking. Due to some waterproofing issues, the ends of the joist (bearing seat on one side) are severely rusted.
The span of the joists is 13.5' and max reaction loads would be ~1000 pounds. The joists are about 12" deep constructed of 1x1 angles for the top/bottom chords.
My idea is to come back from the bearing seat to the first panel point and support it with CMU columns. The is no rust in this location. I still have to support the front 2 ft of floor load but I have another detail for that.
Access is a problem so welding is out (from talking with a few welders that looked at it) and it's residential. Ie. they aren't going to spend 100k ripping everything out and fixing this.
Has anyone ever done this? Short of modeling the joist (which I can do) any suggested methods of analysis? I can't find much about this sort of thing.
The span of the joists is 13.5' and max reaction loads would be ~1000 pounds. The joists are about 12" deep constructed of 1x1 angles for the top/bottom chords.
My idea is to come back from the bearing seat to the first panel point and support it with CMU columns. The is no rust in this location. I still have to support the front 2 ft of floor load but I have another detail for that.
Access is a problem so welding is out (from talking with a few welders that looked at it) and it's residential. Ie. they aren't going to spend 100k ripping everything out and fixing this.
Has anyone ever done this? Short of modeling the joist (which I can do) any suggested methods of analysis? I can't find much about this sort of thing.