Wire rope as tension member in a truss
Wire rope as tension member in a truss
(OP)
We are using wire ropes as tension members in a 120 ft long, 6 ft deep trusses. The trusses are to support a gym roof. We sized the wire ropes so that the factored tension is about 85% of its breaking strength. The wire rope is connected to gusset plates using open swage sockets. The trusses have only tension diagonal members and are not subject to uplift. Any comments on this would be appreciated. Thanks






RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
Cheers
Greg Locock
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RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
The use of cables for tension members obviously intrigues engineers and has been intiguing me. You may have seen that there was another thread on this subject today.
Allow me a stupid question which is not so much structural but more language related. (English is not my mothertongue.)
If you say "factored tension is 85% of breaking strength" is this yield strength or real breaking strenght?
Could you explain in a few words the "Not may terminations reach 85% of the cable strength"?
Rainer
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
I don't recall to what level we designed the cables but I seem to recall the weak link was the clevis connection and not the strand itself. With this also, I think the modulus of elasticity is only slightly smaller (28,000 ksi??) but since the strength is so high, the area comes in low and then you do get deflection issues entering into the solution.
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
There is not such a thing as a yield strenght on a wire rope, breaking strength is when the rope breaks
Many connection devices are only designed to achieve a % of the breaking strength of the rope. 80% / 90% ... usually that is specified by the manufacturer. There are connections that achieve 100%, but not all.
Ailmar, I am with Greg, the 85% seems high. Another comment, which I am sure you already have considered is that the wire rope bracing would only be effective once tensioned (if installed slack it would take quite a bit of deflection go get it working) so you have two problems when you instal it pre-tensioned. Ensure that it has the right amount of pre-tension, and consider the pre-tension loads on the truss.
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
Fe
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
iliconsult: yes we considered a low E for the cables
JAE: The connections are same as your
Kelowna: Although we asked for no slack in the cable, We considered the possibility of some slack by designing the truss as a Viedrendeel truss to support dead loads and checked the max. deflection. So, the truss will be OK even with a slack equal to the deflection due to DL. Local cable suppliers said we can't prestress.
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
I've got to pile on about the 85% of breaking stength thing. Unless you used really high load factors (4 or 5 maybe) that seems dangerously high to me.
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
A factor of safety of 4-5 seems to be very high for this application. I understand the need for such high SF for lifting equipments where dynamics could be unpredictable, but for a truss supporting roof where the major load will be from gradually applied snow load, do we really need SF=4 to 5?
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
It is also very sensitive to any knicks or kinks that will create stress points, necessitating a very observant inspector during construction. There cannot be any damage allowed to the wire rope.
Consequently, I do not feel safe with the 85% figure you mentioned.
Mike McCann
MMC Engineering
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
RE: Wire rope as tension member in a truss
Mike McCann
MMC Engineering