jheidt2543
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 23, 2001
- 1,469
I've thought about this question a few times over the years and I'm wondering what you fellows think about it.
Many years ago, during the construction of a local precast concrete warehouse, a dispute arose, while I was not involved in it (really I wasn't - honest!) here is the gist of it: The precast beams deflected during the placing of the double tee roof plank. The dead load on a building like this is much bigger than the live load. The job was stopped and a testing engineering firm was brought in. Their analysis maintained that the beams were under designed. The Precast company engineer maintained that they cast the beams per plans and even if the beams were under designed, they built them according to the plans.
The Engineer of Record actually did design all the precast (unusual today, but this was 40 years ago - I've been thinking about this a long time) and maintained that although there was "excessive" deflection, the beams were safe and no changes needed. His argument was:
1. The loading was below the beam ultimate strength.
2. The as-cast concrete strength of 6,500 psi was much higher than the
5,000 psi strength used in his design.
I've other projects that raise this same question, although the details may be different. SO, who "owns" the factor of safety. Does the design get to count it to protect his "mistake", is the owner of the building "cheated" because he doesn't get the "benefit" of the added strength, even though the building might be perfectly usable?
Many years ago, during the construction of a local precast concrete warehouse, a dispute arose, while I was not involved in it (really I wasn't - honest!) here is the gist of it: The precast beams deflected during the placing of the double tee roof plank. The dead load on a building like this is much bigger than the live load. The job was stopped and a testing engineering firm was brought in. Their analysis maintained that the beams were under designed. The Precast company engineer maintained that they cast the beams per plans and even if the beams were under designed, they built them according to the plans.
The Engineer of Record actually did design all the precast (unusual today, but this was 40 years ago - I've been thinking about this a long time) and maintained that although there was "excessive" deflection, the beams were safe and no changes needed. His argument was:
1. The loading was below the beam ultimate strength.
2. The as-cast concrete strength of 6,500 psi was much higher than the
5,000 psi strength used in his design.
I've other projects that raise this same question, although the details may be different. SO, who "owns" the factor of safety. Does the design get to count it to protect his "mistake", is the owner of the building "cheated" because he doesn't get the "benefit" of the added strength, even though the building might be perfectly usable?