planc
Structural
- Mar 3, 2022
- 64
can putting such stiffener plates inside the web and flange (illustrated above) produce restrain against torsion? What is the formula for the spacing of the plates?
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pixy said:All the structural engineers I asked here only based it on software. They said the I-beam can support the parapet. And they can't give me any manual computation.
Have you tried offering them money?
I know of no such reference and, given how specialized the application is, I'd be surprised if anything were available in print.
If you're going the truss route, then I feel that the first step is figuring out how to construct and detail that. I've presented one option below.
As for the design of the trussed beam, I would be inclined to model the torsional properties of the assembly as a box or space truss, with the flanges represented by trusses having equivalent shear characteristics to the solid flange. As you rightly anticipated, this design exercise will be quite a bit more involved that just doing the basic checks on a built up HSS.
No.planc said:Can one of you guys just design the flange with trusses and waive all liability.
KootK said:I know of no such reference and, given how specialized the application is, I'd be surprised if anything were available in print
planc said:What would happen if you used trusses on the sides made of angle bars instead of whole one piece plate? It's very difficult to transport whole plates.
@OP: I feel that the trussing idea needs to be abandoned given the size of your beam. It's just not viable for something as small as a W8x21. I was imagining something much larger when I proposed my trussing scheme.
If you’re adding parapet (and wall below) why the need to cantilever off the open section? Why not detail the parapet to avoid loading the beam in torsion?