Fatboycowen
Structural
- Nov 4, 2009
- 15
I am evaluating a Butler building built in the 60s. It appears that some of the roof purlins have rotated. We measured about 5-6 degrees of rotation on some of the purlins, while others were within 1-2 degrees of being perpendicular to the roof deck.
It would appear that the entire purlin, along it's length rotated, rather than just at the midspan.
The question is this - when this building was built, what were the tolerances used for this? What would today's standards be?
The next question is, what should be considered an acceptable amount of rotation before the purlin's strength is significantly reduced.
Thanks in advance.
Jon
It would appear that the entire purlin, along it's length rotated, rather than just at the midspan.
The question is this - when this building was built, what were the tolerances used for this? What would today's standards be?
The next question is, what should be considered an acceptable amount of rotation before the purlin's strength is significantly reduced.
Thanks in advance.
Jon