Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
(OP)
My previous analysis or attempts thereof of a typical wood portal frame assumes that the holdowns at the foundation and the moment connection of the nail grid into the header (and strap) more or less share the moment load equally and I basically give it a pass provided the combined capacity exceeds the actual load. See page 5 of previous analysis below:

However, is this assumption correct? or perhaps close enough?
My most recent spreadsheet for portal frames so far does not take into account the moment capacity of the nail gird, straps and sheathing. It essentially treats the pony wall and shear panels on each side of the opening as separate (segmented) shear walls, see below:

When the two legs of the double portal frame are different lengths I utilize the three term deflection equation from the SDPWS to compute the shear force to each leg such that the deflections are equal.
The problem I see with my current attempt at an analysis is that the holdown forces will actually be significantly less than shown since the moment connection at the shear panel/header interface (nail grid and strap) will decreases these forces at the foundation. The question is how do I quantify this decrease in holdown forces without an elaborate FEA model. I'm wondering if anyone has done this sort of thing before and might have some hints or ideas.
The other thought that came to me is the moment connection at the top of the shear panels will make the entire portal frame stiffer and hence decrease deflection as well as make it attract more load in a rigid diaphragm analysis.
A copy of my spreadsheet is located here is anyone is interested in looking at my algorithm for computing the deflection and the distribution of shear.
http://design.medeek.com/resources/PFH/
I actually started with the 4 term deflection equation but I could not get it to give reasonable answers when the difference between the two legs was only slightly different. I think it may have something to do with the non-linearity of the equation and the nail slip term.

However, is this assumption correct? or perhaps close enough?
My most recent spreadsheet for portal frames so far does not take into account the moment capacity of the nail gird, straps and sheathing. It essentially treats the pony wall and shear panels on each side of the opening as separate (segmented) shear walls, see below:

When the two legs of the double portal frame are different lengths I utilize the three term deflection equation from the SDPWS to compute the shear force to each leg such that the deflections are equal.
The problem I see with my current attempt at an analysis is that the holdown forces will actually be significantly less than shown since the moment connection at the shear panel/header interface (nail grid and strap) will decreases these forces at the foundation. The question is how do I quantify this decrease in holdown forces without an elaborate FEA model. I'm wondering if anyone has done this sort of thing before and might have some hints or ideas.
The other thought that came to me is the moment connection at the top of the shear panels will make the entire portal frame stiffer and hence decrease deflection as well as make it attract more load in a rigid diaphragm analysis.
A copy of my spreadsheet is located here is anyone is interested in looking at my algorithm for computing the deflection and the distribution of shear.
http://design.medeek.com/resources/PFH/
I actually started with the 4 term deflection equation but I could not get it to give reasonable answers when the difference between the two legs was only slightly different. I think it may have something to do with the non-linearity of the equation and the nail slip term.
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com






RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
My thinking is that a relative stiffness can be determined by calculating the moment of inertia of the pony wall/header and the piers as per example problem 14.6 in Malone's book and then converting this to an equivalent rectangular section that can be dumped into a matrix analysis. Unfortunately, this may be a bit too complex for my Excel spreadsheet and may need to be programmed in Perl.
The other thing to note is that my current analysis neglects the counteracting weight of the dead loads (load case 7: 0.6D + 0.6W) that will offset the tension on the holdowns, however I am fine with this conservative simplification for now.
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
It is interesting to note that at the outside studs the beam will deflect upwards and the dead load will actually increase the tension force in the holdowns at these locations. In reality the header is attached to the sheathing by some ridiculous nailing (3" o/c) so this uplift at the ends will probably be distributed into the shear panels and not all concentrated at the outside studs.
If my portal frames were not so atypical I would simply use the numbers in the APA TT-100 document to validate their use.
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
This particular case was a bit more challenging than my typical garage walls. The wind loads gave me a total shear load of approx. 4800 lbs. The two available wall spaces on each side of the door are too narrow for conventional shear walls segmented or perforated (aspect ratio of 3.8 or greater) so the only available segment is the 4'-3.5" section on the right of the man door. I also considered using FTAO around the door openings but I've never been very comfortable with that method where it involves doors instead of windows, partly due to Section 13.4 of R. Terry Malone's book, perhaps I am misguided in this respect.
If I use only the 4'-3.5" segment my holdown forces (12,320 lbs) and unit shear in this panel become too high in my opinion, so I wanted to try and pick up some of that shear in the rest of the wall, hence the portal frame.
Based on my analysis with Woodworks Software and distribution of shear based on deflection I get 1618 lbs picked up by the portal frame and 3142 lbs picked up by the shear wall (SWL B-1), with this load distribution my uplift forces at the shear wall are a more manageable 8,000 lbs and the unit shear is considerably reduced as well.
I am not sure if there is any problem combining the two methods in one wall line but as long as they are deflection compatible I don't see a problem.
My one other concern with this particular configuration is the pony wall height. The prescriptive code (IRC & IBC) don't seem to have any direction on max. pony wall height. However other local codes have adopted a 4' max. on this height:
http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/dpwes/navbar/faqs/win...
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
The moment distribution between top and bottom of the shear panels is based on capacity, this seemed the simplest and most reasonable way to approach this and it also agrees with Martin's paper.
Give it a go and let me know what you think:
http://design.medeek.com/resources/PFH/PFH_CALCULA...
http://design.medeek.com/resources/PFH/PFH_CALCULA...
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
EIT
www.HowToEngineer.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
As I mentioned in a previous thread some additional checks might also be:
1.) Foundation stiffness check for stemwall foundations, thickened edge slab foundations (slab-on-grade) and the stemwall foundation with thickened edge slab at doorways as shown above.
2.) Compression and tension check of shear panel chords (secondary strap on outside of portal frame really needed?).
3.) Bearing pressure check where chords contact sill plate and possibly top plate or header.
4.) Bending check of the header combining 0.6D and the wind or seismic load imparted to the header via the tension straps.
My current method of calculating the deflection of the portal frame uses the three term SDPWS shearwall deflection equation which deals with nail slip, shear, holdowns and bending of the shear panels. This deflection is then combined with the deflection of the pony wall (bending, shear and nail slip only) to arrive at the total deflection of the portal frame. The deflection equations are making the assumption that the shear panels are behaving as typical segmented shear walls so this may not be completely accurate and is probably over estimating the deflection.
I am left wondering if anyone has done any research into the deflection of portal frames and if there is any development of the math to predict this deflection?
A confused student is a good student.
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson, PE
www.medeek.com
RE: Revisit of Wood Portal Frames
The frames are likely flexible enough that the majority of the load is going to go elsewhere to stiffer elements.