Nulukkizdin
Structural
- Apr 18, 2014
- 24
I'm looking at deflections for an unblocked wood sheathing diaphragm under wind loading (seismic is much lower in my case). Heading to the special design provisions for wood and seismic (AWC), I found myself looking at section 4.2.2 for deflection. The deflection calculation has (3) components, accounting for bending deflection, shear deflection, and fastener deformation.
The bending deflection and fastener deformation terms seem to be fairly straightforward, but I'm a bit curious regarding the shear deflections. The concept itself seems fine, but when I go to look at the Ga term, I'm slightly unsure of its use for wind. All of the 4.2 tables which list these values seem to place a value for only SEISMIC loading. The table has no Ga term for wind loading.
Jumping back to the commentary seems to take this one step further. C4.2.2 has an equation defining Ga, but calculates it based on the shear capacity for seismic. Furthermore, in the example, we again are looking at a seismic case to determine the value of Ga.
The conservative approach would be to use the same Ga factor for wind design as you would use for seismic design. While this may be conservative, I am still curious if it is the correct approach if deflections were needed in a wind controlled diaphragm design. With this in mind, it also seems odd that for a fairly uniform distribution of load (as is the case for wind), you would get a large contribution of shear deformation at the mid-span of your "beam"?
Let me know what you think!
The bending deflection and fastener deformation terms seem to be fairly straightforward, but I'm a bit curious regarding the shear deflections. The concept itself seems fine, but when I go to look at the Ga term, I'm slightly unsure of its use for wind. All of the 4.2 tables which list these values seem to place a value for only SEISMIC loading. The table has no Ga term for wind loading.
Jumping back to the commentary seems to take this one step further. C4.2.2 has an equation defining Ga, but calculates it based on the shear capacity for seismic. Furthermore, in the example, we again are looking at a seismic case to determine the value of Ga.
The conservative approach would be to use the same Ga factor for wind design as you would use for seismic design. While this may be conservative, I am still curious if it is the correct approach if deflections were needed in a wind controlled diaphragm design. With this in mind, it also seems odd that for a fairly uniform distribution of load (as is the case for wind), you would get a large contribution of shear deformation at the mid-span of your "beam"?
Let me know what you think!