mkrei
Structural
- Mar 12, 2006
- 22
I have a steel beam supporting (4) elevator hoist beams (two cars). I am not sure if the contractor welded the elevator hoist beams to the supporting steel beam to provide a brace point. One end of the hoist beam is pocketed into a concrete wall with bearing plate the other end is bearing on my beam. (4) beams bear on the beam which is approximately 17'-0" long. Went back and ran the loads for unbraced for the 17' length and the beam works fine for the static load case. (This beam supports (2) elevator cars therefore the (4) beams.) When I run one pair of beam with the dynamic load and one pair of beams with the static loads I have a 25% overstress. The dynamic loads are approximately twice the static loads. The beam supporting the hoist beams frames into a concrete shear wall with a very large weld plate and a full height welded clip angle connection. My question is "does the welded connection to the concrete shear wall provide enough torsional restraint to reduce the unbraced length to something less than 17'-0"" If I run the beam as 15' unbraced length it works. I have a call into the contractor so see if they remember welding the machine beams down but if not someone would have to go in and perform the welding inside the elevator shaft or somehow brace the beam.
Please let me know your thoughts.
Please let me know your thoughts.