allisch
Structural
- Jul 2, 2007
- 26
There is a laminated post company which is manufacturing laminated 2x wood posts for pole barn type structures. We are in a 90 mph wind zone.
They seem to show that they can use a (4)ply 2x6 post for wall heights to 24' with posts at 8' oc. (#1SYP material)
30 psf LL, 7 psf DL, 90 mph, negligable earthquake
They specified a maximum building size of 32' width.
I see the design wind load for the "non-corner" part of the building as being 13.6 psf suction (per IBC Table 1609.6.2.1(2)), which gives approx 110 plf.
If the post is properly embedded in designed footing, then I would use a fixed base and pinned top support.
Max Moment = wl^2/8 where L = the sidewall ht=24'
M=7850 ftlbs applied due to wind
According to my NDS 2005, I see #1SYP 2x6's as Fb=1650, E=1700, Fc=1750
S=33in^3 if the post is turned the strong direction to resist wind.
(Assuming the post is laterally braced (weak axis) 2' on center by girts, but only braced at the floor and ceiling level (24') in the strong axis.
I see the Moment capacity =4540 ftlbs at 100% or 6040 ftlbs at 133% wind stress.
So the wind stress in bending is 173%
So I think the post fails without even adding the gravity loads.
I have that the post has a design axial load of 11.4k.
If the building is framed with trusses (and posts only on the perimeter) in the 32' direction, with 30 psf LL, 7 psf DL, and 90 mph winds, the applied axial load under combined wind + dead + live is approx 5.3k.
So the axial load is using 47% of the design stress.
(I use column Ke=0.8 for fixed base posts-pinned at the top)
I missing something? Do you see any way that they can make this engineering work?
I don't see how they can have engineering to make this work.
They seem to show that they can use a (4)ply 2x6 post for wall heights to 24' with posts at 8' oc. (#1SYP material)
30 psf LL, 7 psf DL, 90 mph, negligable earthquake
They specified a maximum building size of 32' width.
I see the design wind load for the "non-corner" part of the building as being 13.6 psf suction (per IBC Table 1609.6.2.1(2)), which gives approx 110 plf.
If the post is properly embedded in designed footing, then I would use a fixed base and pinned top support.
Max Moment = wl^2/8 where L = the sidewall ht=24'
M=7850 ftlbs applied due to wind
According to my NDS 2005, I see #1SYP 2x6's as Fb=1650, E=1700, Fc=1750
S=33in^3 if the post is turned the strong direction to resist wind.
(Assuming the post is laterally braced (weak axis) 2' on center by girts, but only braced at the floor and ceiling level (24') in the strong axis.
I see the Moment capacity =4540 ftlbs at 100% or 6040 ftlbs at 133% wind stress.
So the wind stress in bending is 173%
So I think the post fails without even adding the gravity loads.
I have that the post has a design axial load of 11.4k.
If the building is framed with trusses (and posts only on the perimeter) in the 32' direction, with 30 psf LL, 7 psf DL, and 90 mph winds, the applied axial load under combined wind + dead + live is approx 5.3k.
So the axial load is using 47% of the design stress.
(I use column Ke=0.8 for fixed base posts-pinned at the top)
I missing something? Do you see any way that they can make this engineering work?
I don't see how they can have engineering to make this work.