几何尺寸与公差论坛------致力于产品几何量公差标准GD&T (GDT:ASME)|New GPS(ISO)研究/CAD设计/CAM加工/CMM测量  


返回   几何尺寸与公差论坛------致力于产品几何量公差标准GD&T (GDT:ASME)|New GPS(ISO)研究/CAD设计/CAM加工/CMM测量 » 三维空间:产品设计或CAX软件使用 » CAD设计 » 产品功能分析
用户名
密码
注册 帮助 会员 日历 银行 搜索 今日新帖 标记论坛为已读


回复
 
主题工具 搜索本主题 显示模式
旧 2009-09-08, 01:22 PM   #1
huangyhg
超级版主
 
huangyhg的头像
 
注册日期: 04-03
帖子: 18592
精华: 36
现金: 249466 标准币
资产: 1080358888 标准币
huangyhg 向着好的方向发展
默认 considering moment in design

considering moment in design
hi there. this might sound really weired but today i got involved in a discussion with our senior engineer who has 30 years of experience under his belt. (i've joined this company just recently) he was saying that in east coast we do not consider earthquake loads in design and also in areas where basic wind speed is 90 mph (minimum) we do not even consider connections (beam, column, base, etc.) moment resisting. we assume everything pinned and do our design. well, i'm not used to this and have never heard of such a thing. particularly when it comes to a concrete building, it is automatically a full moment resisting frame and you can't just ignore it! anyway, that's what he says and none of us could convince the other. since i haven't been doing this for a long time (and what he says is 100% in contrary with what we learned in university) i thought i might ask you guys. is he right? sounds impossible to me but is it really true?
i appreciate your help. (although he wouldn't listen anyway, but i'll know the truth.)
check out our whitepaper library.
if you designed the concrete frame as pinned, it would probably stand up, but i imagine there would be huge cracks at the pinned joints.
i would also think that this would lead to larger beams than necessary with very little benefit.
i have always designed concrete frames as continuous with moment connections to the columns.
if there are no cold joints in the concrete system, it is inherently fixed at each end. think of a simple foundation in plan, really the whole rectangle in plan is a rigid box
i should add, it is inherently fixed, but if proper reinforcing is not added, the system may act as pinned with unsightly cracks.
that's exactly what i told him. he was arguing that you define the behavior of the system by the design concept you choose. i didn't agree and said technically, you can not ignore the fact that moment will be transferred between beams & columns so you can not dictate your thoughts all the time. well , meybe toy can do that in a steel building where you choose what type of connections you use (e.g. simple or moment resisting or ...) or at connection to foundation, if you assume everything pinned, the whole framing system will become unstable. i don't find his argument valid at all. my main problem is that he says "we design like this in the u.s."
xeus, here on the east coast seismic usually doesnt control the design, wind does. perhaps it is just a conservative approach by assuming pinned behavior, and adding in shear walls to handle lateral forces with the moment resistive nature of the frame as sort of suspenders along with a belt.
one of my pals went to work in d.c. and he said kinda the same thing. he said they design 8-10 story flat plate and flat slab bldgs all the time and don't run the first lateral analysis. i've designed a few east coast concrete bldgs and for ones not that tall, the gravity-only lcs resulted in tremendously higher moments at the support and drift was next to nothing, so that assumption would've been ok.
are you sure your boss wasn't saying to design for wl^2/8 and conservatively throw that into the top and bottom steel? i could see an older fellow doing that. be careful arguing with him. re
xeus, after reading your last post, all i have to say is "hang in there." don't argue a lot with him. it's hopeless and won't get you anywhere in the company. he's been doing this for (maybe) longer than you've been alive, and i assume nothing fallen down yet, so there doesn't appear to be a need for you to save bldg occupants from him, lolol.
he also might be completely right and just not communicating correctly the idea to you.
he is right in one thing, concrete does tend to act the way you reinforce it (to an extent). it just cracks to alleviate the stresses where there is no reinforcement.
i think this may be a violation of section 10.6 in aci 318 where they talk about minimum reinforcement.
do not question his judgement directly, ask 'to understand' what the justification is according to the code.
your boss is right in saying 'you define the behavior of the system by the design concept' but you got to make sure that you detail it such that your design assumption are valid.
as for designing an rc frame as having pinned connections it can be done but i wouldnt analyse it this way.
in my opinion, aci section 8.3 clearly spells out the method of analysis with sections 8.4 thru 8.9 providing additional info.
do the drawings that are being produced have both top and bottom steel and do they seem reasonable in size and quantity as to what you would normally expect from the continuous method? if so, then the building may be built adequately and it is just the particular method he uses that is the issue.
__________________
借用达朗贝尔的名言:前进吧,你会得到信心!
[url="http://www.dimcax.com"]几何尺寸与公差标准[/url]
huangyhg离线中   回复时引用此帖
GDT自动化论坛(仅游客可见)
回复


主题工具 搜索本主题
搜索本主题:

高级搜索
显示模式

发帖规则
不可以发表新主题
不可以回复主题
不可以上传附件
不可以编辑您的帖子

vB 代码开启
[IMG]代码开启
HTML代码关闭

相似的主题
主题 主题发起者 论坛 回复 最后发表
cantilever steel beam at column huangyhg 产品功能分析 0 2009-09-07 10:40 PM
calculations personal tool or public record huangyhg 产品功能分析 0 2009-09-07 10:10 PM
beams shear splices vs. moment splices huangyhg 产品功能分析 0 2009-09-07 03:13 PM
base plate design- simple design huangyhg 产品功能分析 0 2009-09-07 02:25 PM
aisc 13th ed. and cjp dw moment connections huangyhg 产品功能分析 0 2009-09-07 10:27 AM


所有的时间均为北京时间。 现在的时间是 02:44 AM.


于2004年创办,几何尺寸与公差论坛"致力于产品几何量公差标准GD&T | GPS研究/CAD设计/CAM加工/CMM测量"。免责声明:论坛严禁发布色情反动言论及有关违反国家法律法规内容!情节严重者提供其IP,并配合相关部门进行严厉查处,若內容有涉及侵权,请立即联系我们QQ:44671734。注:此论坛须管理员验证方可发帖。
沪ICP备06057009号-2
更多