EV11
Structural
- Mar 30, 2021
- 10
I am looking for some guidance on how to determine the tensile loads carried by sag rods in structural steel buildings.
The situation that I’m dealing with is common - a frame in a structural steel building with horizontal wall girts spanning from column to column to support the weight of the wall assembly and resist wind loads. Because it is a long span (32 feet), I want to add sag rods at mid-span of the frame. The girts can withstand the vertical wall loads, but there will be quite a bit of vertical deflection and the sag rods will help with that. Could someone share their approach for determining the loads carried by the sag rods in this situation? I had thought of assuming that the rods carry a certain percentage of the wall’s weight, but I’m unsure whether this is a good approach.
Thank you.
The situation that I’m dealing with is common - a frame in a structural steel building with horizontal wall girts spanning from column to column to support the weight of the wall assembly and resist wind loads. Because it is a long span (32 feet), I want to add sag rods at mid-span of the frame. The girts can withstand the vertical wall loads, but there will be quite a bit of vertical deflection and the sag rods will help with that. Could someone share their approach for determining the loads carried by the sag rods in this situation? I had thought of assuming that the rods carry a certain percentage of the wall’s weight, but I’m unsure whether this is a good approach.
Thank you.