NBEEBE
Structural
- Mar 12, 2010
- 10
Hi, I'm just wondering if anyone sees a reason why bolted/bolted connections for beam to girder connections in steel buildings are not often seen in steel construction in California. I am a detailer for a fabricator in California and we never see bolted/bolted connections being used on contract drawings. With the use of automated equipment in our shop it would be very beneficial in my opinion to be able to bolt angle clips rather than fit up and weld shear plates on girders. Less inspection, less qualified labor required, and a lot less fit up time. I'm not sure if being within certain seismic zones could play a role in this or not. It seems if a bolted/bolted connection can resist the shear forces shown on the contract drawings there wouldn't be any issue in using these. I often think we as a fabricator we should see about proposing the bolted angle connection rather than the welded plates commonly seen, BUT am a little hesitant because I am merely a detailer, not an engineer, and connection design has never been needed or provided by our company. If anyone could shed some light on any reason these connections aren't seen in californa (as far as I've seen) that would be great. Thanks in advance