Lion06
Structural
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4,238
I want to explain a situation that recently happened in my office and I would appreciate some feedback.
I am working on a project for which I am the main contact for our firm. I am doing the design and coordination with the architect. I check in periodically with a senior engineer to go over what I am doing.
I had an exchange this week that troubled me a bit.
There is one situation where we have a four sided, self supporting "closet" (so to speak) to house some sliding doors. There are some very small members that span wall to wall and bear on top of the wall. They are supporting little load. I decided to make them small HSS so that I could attach a light gauge clip angle to both sides of the tube where it bears on the wall so that these two clips would prevent twist of the member at this location to provide a brace point. I told him the reason I did this was that if I couldn't brace the end, I wouldn't be able to calculate an unbraced length because it wasn't restrained anywhere. Even if I provided one clip for a channel, it could still twist at the ends and just flop over.
He proceeded to tell me that if you have a beam, set it on a wall (without restraining the top flange at a single location and without restraining the ends against torsion) that the unbraced length would be the actual length of the beam. I expressed some concerns about this, and even stated that AISC would not allow this (pointed to the example of a seat angle having the requirement for the top angle to brace the ends). He proceeded to just tell me I was wrong and that the unbraced length is never larger than the actual length (which I agree with as long as it is actually braced at its ends).
He also talked about how he was talking about strength and not overall stability of the member. Isn't lateral-torsional buckling a stability failure and NOT a strength failure. As far as I am concerned that is a stability issue.
Anyway, I think he came away from that meeting with the impression that I am lacking some fundamental understanding of behavior, but I am not seeing it that way.
Can anyone here comment on my thought process?
This person has been with the company for about 10 years and has about 20 years of experience. He only recently came to our office and this was one of the first interactions I've had with him. He is well-respected in the office and I hate the idea of him thinking that I am lacking fundamental knowledge.
It ended up being a very akward situation for me, because I felt like he was missing the fundamental idea I was trying to get across (which I thought I did pretty clearly), but how does a guy with 1.5 years experience say that to a 20 year guy?
Any thoughts?
I am working on a project for which I am the main contact for our firm. I am doing the design and coordination with the architect. I check in periodically with a senior engineer to go over what I am doing.
I had an exchange this week that troubled me a bit.
There is one situation where we have a four sided, self supporting "closet" (so to speak) to house some sliding doors. There are some very small members that span wall to wall and bear on top of the wall. They are supporting little load. I decided to make them small HSS so that I could attach a light gauge clip angle to both sides of the tube where it bears on the wall so that these two clips would prevent twist of the member at this location to provide a brace point. I told him the reason I did this was that if I couldn't brace the end, I wouldn't be able to calculate an unbraced length because it wasn't restrained anywhere. Even if I provided one clip for a channel, it could still twist at the ends and just flop over.
He proceeded to tell me that if you have a beam, set it on a wall (without restraining the top flange at a single location and without restraining the ends against torsion) that the unbraced length would be the actual length of the beam. I expressed some concerns about this, and even stated that AISC would not allow this (pointed to the example of a seat angle having the requirement for the top angle to brace the ends). He proceeded to just tell me I was wrong and that the unbraced length is never larger than the actual length (which I agree with as long as it is actually braced at its ends).
He also talked about how he was talking about strength and not overall stability of the member. Isn't lateral-torsional buckling a stability failure and NOT a strength failure. As far as I am concerned that is a stability issue.
Anyway, I think he came away from that meeting with the impression that I am lacking some fundamental understanding of behavior, but I am not seeing it that way.
Can anyone here comment on my thought process?
This person has been with the company for about 10 years and has about 20 years of experience. He only recently came to our office and this was one of the first interactions I've had with him. He is well-respected in the office and I hate the idea of him thinking that I am lacking fundamental knowledge.
It ended up being a very akward situation for me, because I felt like he was missing the fundamental idea I was trying to get across (which I thought I did pretty clearly), but how does a guy with 1.5 years experience say that to a 20 year guy?
Any thoughts?