studentin9
Structural
- Jul 15, 2024
- 3
Hey all,
I wanted to reach out about a question for continuous beams and where to place bracing. Reading into AISC steel manual, I see they have a formula for Cb that relates to an unbraced length (C-F1-5) for a continuous beam but I can not find code describing how far away bracing should be placed from the middle supports where negative moment is the highest. The only information that I can find is that the inflection point from positive to negative moment is not a bracing point. I have heard that most just placed at locations of joists past the inflection point into the positive moment area, but is there a specific equation/code that gives the location at which bracing near the center supports gives the most moment capacity. I am currently dealing with a continuous beam that has one middle support that causes so much negative moment the beam is failing at 200% over moment capacity. I would greatly appreciate some direction into the standards for unbraced distance from that middle support.
I wanted to reach out about a question for continuous beams and where to place bracing. Reading into AISC steel manual, I see they have a formula for Cb that relates to an unbraced length (C-F1-5) for a continuous beam but I can not find code describing how far away bracing should be placed from the middle supports where negative moment is the highest. The only information that I can find is that the inflection point from positive to negative moment is not a bracing point. I have heard that most just placed at locations of joists past the inflection point into the positive moment area, but is there a specific equation/code that gives the location at which bracing near the center supports gives the most moment capacity. I am currently dealing with a continuous beam that has one middle support that causes so much negative moment the beam is failing at 200% over moment capacity. I would greatly appreciate some direction into the standards for unbraced distance from that middle support.