anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
(OP)
I have a question regarding sill plate anchorage requirements. The 2000IRC requires that the wood sill plate be anchored to the foundation with minimum 1/2" anchor bolts at maximum 6' on-center. I am concerned about basement walls that retain earth, but are NOT cantilever retaining walls. These walls are braced at the top by the floor framing, and at the bottom by the footing or floor slab. The sill plate is typically pressure treated southern pine, which is loaded perpendicular to the grain. For a permanent load, the durattion factor is0.9. Therefore, according to the NDS the strength of 1/2" bolt embedded in concrete with 1 1/2" sill plate is 400*0.9=360 pounds. If you have an 8' wall retaining about 6 feet of good soil, the force at the foundation to sill interface is approximately 230 plf assuming at-rest soil conditions. Therefore, a 1/2" bolt is required every 1.57 feet. A 5/8" bolt would be required every 2.2 feet, and a 1" bolt is theoretically required every 3'. The force on a bolt at 6' spacing is 1380 pounds.
What am I missing here? I know that basement walls are going in with 1/2" anchor bolts at 6' spacing, but they seem to be overstressed.
What am I missing here? I know that basement walls are going in with 1/2" anchor bolts at 6' spacing, but they seem to be overstressed.






RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
That wouldn't explain the 6' spacing vs. 1.5' required by your calcs. Just thinking of our geotech friends and their 3.0 and 4.0 safety factors vs. what really occurs over the life of a home.
Also, I see lots of basement walls with cracks and bowing vs. bolts shearing off. Perhaps at-rest pressures aren't entirely appropriate.
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
I think another problem is that reinforcing is not a requirement in residential basement walls. At my last firm we did a lot of residential type work, and bowing/cracked basement walls were a relatively frequent problem. I'm not talking about a vertical shrinkage crack in the concrete, but horizontal cracks. Once a plain concrete wall gets a horizontal crack, it is incapable of spanning vertically. Even a small amount of vertical rebar gives a great benefit in flexural strength and ductility. I think this could also be done at minimal cost.
I also find it disturbing that the Code does not appear to address specifically the anchorage of basement walls to wood sill plates. I wonder if their rationale for the 1/2" bolts at 6' is based on past construction practice (without engineering backup)which hasn't resulted in an unacceptable number of failures.
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
I have had a simular discussion before: http://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?SQID=39028&SPID=507&newpid=507&page=3
Read the small print at the bottom of Table 5-1 in ASCE 7. After 8 feet, the way I read it, basement walls go to resist at rest pressures.
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
I looked for the above referenced design guide on their web-site with no luck. Can you pin point it for me?
Thanks,
Chip
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
If the walls are too long then they start to behave like you describe (pinned at the top and bottom).
I think this anchor bolt requirement is a holdover from the days when structures were relatively small and the walls were short. The prescriptive codes do not get updated as often as the engineered codes do and there is alot of momentum not to change from the Contractors.
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
When the wall is 8' or less I just let the code govern but if I am asked to design a wall that is over the 8' in height I call for larger bolts and shorter (way shorter) spacing. But when I do so, I feel like a fool. But I go by the numbers. So, is there a flaw in our engineering or what?
Mrengineer- That book sounds great but as an engineer I feel I have to rely on sound engineering and if the book can't back up it's ideas with engineering principles and I rely on those ideas and a wall collapses, I know who will get the blame and it wouldn't be the book.
It appears a lot of people are confused over this issue and I know one thing for sure and that is I am confused.
By
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
Try http://www.nahbrc.org/tertiaryR.asp?TrackID=&CategoryID=1657&DocumentID=2631
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
Go to www.nahbrc.org, click on "bookstore", "builder and designer guides"
bylar: There is more elaboration on this issue in the cited reference. Neither I nor NAHB is proposing to ignore calculations altogether. The Design Guide has numerous examples with calculations. The main point here is that engineering judgement is a requirement in our profession, and this particular reference does a good job in that regard. Judge for yourself!
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
On the basement walls that have started to bow, or have a horizontal crack, I've been calling out for the Grip-Tite anchor system. I reviewed the calcs for this a while back and kicked myself in the butt for not coming up with it myself. I have seen it actually bring the wall, for the most part, back together.
http://www.griptite.com/wallanchor.html
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall
I think this is a good thread with some relavent comments but to much of a pain to keep track of both threads.
RE: anchor bolts between wood sill and foundations wall