BR0
Structural
- Nov 10, 2010
- 46
Hi All,
I am working on an existing building with about (100) 5.25x15 - 24F-V4 glulams. Many have deteriorated in one area due to a waterproofing issue. Many of the glulams have damage that is a bit of a grey area that visually and by sounding is not severe but there does seem to be some reduction. This deterioration is in the compression zone.
The roof is part of a driving range platform and 2/3s of the roof has a concrete overlay and the other 1/3 has a membrane roof. The roof leaks at the junction.
In the NDS this glulam has a Tension Zone in Tension - Fbx+ = 2,400 PSI and a Compression Zone in Tension - Fbx- = 1,850 PSI. It doesn't say explicitly what the Compression Zone in Compression is, but I believe it is implicitly Fbx = 2,400 PSI.
The reason this is of interest is that using Stress Wave NDT and comparing the stress wave transmission times between sound wood and decayed wood there is a correlation to % reduced capacity can be inferred. A reference that goes into this by USDA is Stress Wave Timing Nondestructive Evaluation Tools for Inspecting Historic Structures.
I was wondering if anyone has ever used Stress Wave NDTs to determine a reduced capacity and if they have any additional sources for the correlation.
I appreciate any help you can provide.
I am working on an existing building with about (100) 5.25x15 - 24F-V4 glulams. Many have deteriorated in one area due to a waterproofing issue. Many of the glulams have damage that is a bit of a grey area that visually and by sounding is not severe but there does seem to be some reduction. This deterioration is in the compression zone.
The roof is part of a driving range platform and 2/3s of the roof has a concrete overlay and the other 1/3 has a membrane roof. The roof leaks at the junction.
In the NDS this glulam has a Tension Zone in Tension - Fbx+ = 2,400 PSI and a Compression Zone in Tension - Fbx- = 1,850 PSI. It doesn't say explicitly what the Compression Zone in Compression is, but I believe it is implicitly Fbx = 2,400 PSI.
The reason this is of interest is that using Stress Wave NDT and comparing the stress wave transmission times between sound wood and decayed wood there is a correlation to % reduced capacity can be inferred. A reference that goes into this by USDA is Stress Wave Timing Nondestructive Evaluation Tools for Inspecting Historic Structures.
I was wondering if anyone has ever used Stress Wave NDTs to determine a reduced capacity and if they have any additional sources for the correlation.
I appreciate any help you can provide.