mathlete7
Aerospace
- Sep 13, 2008
- 52
Hello folks,
So, we all know about the basic design practice of using stiffeners at all locations where point loads are introduced into beams, right? For instance, if you have an I-beam that is loaded in the middle you'd put a stiffener where the point load is introduced to stabilize the web locally.
Well, i'm stuck with some hardware that doesn't have this feature, we "don't have time to modify", and I need to figure out some hand-waving to write a margin against localized web buckling. Does anyone know of a methodology for this (Bruhn/Niu/etc)?
I should note that the upper and lower chords are stabilized in the out-of-plane directions so out-of-plane chord buckling isn't a concern. Only localized buckling of the web where the point load is applied.
Thanks for you input...
So, we all know about the basic design practice of using stiffeners at all locations where point loads are introduced into beams, right? For instance, if you have an I-beam that is loaded in the middle you'd put a stiffener where the point load is introduced to stabilize the web locally.
Well, i'm stuck with some hardware that doesn't have this feature, we "don't have time to modify", and I need to figure out some hand-waving to write a margin against localized web buckling. Does anyone know of a methodology for this (Bruhn/Niu/etc)?
I should note that the upper and lower chords are stabilized in the out-of-plane directions so out-of-plane chord buckling isn't a concern. Only localized buckling of the web where the point load is applied.
Thanks for you input...