MGaMart
Structural
- Aug 23, 2016
- 50
I'm curious to get the community's opinion regarding this. Many connection details (let's focus on brace connections) I've made in the past constitute a single bolt row (transverse to the line of action of the force). Whitmore sections utilise the overlap length between the first and last bolt row in defining the effective region of gusset plates for analysis of yielding and buckling. With a single bolt row, the methodology breaks down and resolves the calculations to a judgement call from the designer. Other limit states aside which may/may not govern the design (bolt tearout, bolt shear, block shear, etc.), what rationale do some people apply in circumventing this 'grey' area of the Whitmore Section? I do understand that changing the bolt geometry to include an extra bolt row, or swapping the bolt row to be a bolt column is an alternative, just not a very economical one. Swapping bolted details to welded details also does this, but let's just focus on bolts for this discussion.