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W8x10 and W10x12 are almost always very short, so little of the cost is from tonnage. The weight difference is small between those and W12x14, which almost never causes any connection difficulty.You should definitely specify in your Agreement if you won't be designing the connections.
I like to design the connections, or at a minimum make sure a reasonable connection should work for the member sizes shown on the plans. For example, with really shallow I-beams (like W8s and W10s) it's not uncommon that a basic shear tab connection with (2) bolts won't work. I'd rather know that up-front so I can either choose a deeper beam section (if possible) or a different connection type, rather than wait for the steel fabricator to (hopefully) catch it.
I'd also add that I've seen a very wide range recently in terms of the quality of work done by steel detailers and fabricators. It makes me more cautious when it comes to handing off this very important part of the design.
The W8s and W10s I mention are common in residential construction where a shallow beam is needed to fit in a limited floor depth. Without such a constraint, I normally use the deepest section possible.Knowing what I know now, I would almost never use a W8 and might even use W12x14 as the typical minimum.
As Engineer Of Record, don't you still have to review the steel shop drawings and make sure what is shown in the steel shop drawings (like number of bolts at each connection) matches your table in the detail you provide in your structural drawings?I design the connections for everything and add a table to one of the connection details showing the number of bolts for each beam size. As part of the design, I make sure that the number of bolts shown in the table will work for the beam sizes listed. It's easier for me to do that than review all of the connection details in the steel submittal weeks after the design is finished and I have to remind myself about the loadings & reactions for each condition. I detail bracing and moment frame connections, too.
This is an interesting approach as an EOR. I'm curious how this arrangement is structured contractually. Do you provide the shop drawings under a separate contract with the GC or architect, or is it part of your basic design contract with the architect? Do you deliver the shop drawings as a separate drawing package later or do you include them in the CD set?As Engineer Of Record, don't you still have to review the steel shop drawings and make sure what is shown in the steel shop drawings (like number of bolts at each connection) matches your table in the detail you provide in your structural drawings?
Since we were reviewing the steel shop drawings anyway, we started taking our Revit model, and exporting the structural elements to advance steel. In the time it would take to review the shops, we could generate them. It was a total cash cow, especially if you used the built in dynamo tools to automate the process. I've never had a project that didn't assemble perfectly together. The architect still had to review the overall dimensions. Contractor was responsible for providing the bottom of base plate elevations. It's a no brainer. This whole process only works if you are modeling your structure in Revit accurately. Garbage in = garbage out.
Fully agree, but, at least in our area, it wasn't an issue. Advance steel generated the NC / NC1 files needed for the machines local fabricators had. DXF files were used for the burn table machines that the plate fabricators used. There was one guy that had a 6 axis Python machine that used the NC1 files. What used to take 1 hour to fab was reduced to 8 min. FYI, nothing against Tekla, but advance steel was included in our subscription and it seemed to get the job done.Advance steel may work for some fabricators, but not all. Keep in mind this software is used to control all that fancy equipment...
Also fully agree. I quite working with architects using autocad, but still had to work with garbage architectural revit models all the time. I still modeled everything accurately in Revit based on the dimensions called out in the architectural CD's and tried to avoid showing elements from the garbage architectural model where possible. Please note that as the EOR, I wasn't giving my revit model to a fabricator or detailer. I was the detailer. Nothing was lost in translation this way. The only model that was shared with the rest of the team (architect, mech, plumbing), was the structural revit model, which had my 3d cad solid steel model linked in, which was basically un-editable by anyone else. It was only provided for coordination with other disciplines like mechanical / plumbing.In all my years I have been provided some very terrible models from EOR's and architects. I would be very hesitant about a new teams model.
We don't generate models as EOR, aside from 2D CAD files. The only models I get are from our steel fabricator clients when they retain us to do calculations; they model it in Tekla and give me the .ifc.You guys have problems with the models from the EOR? I've had no issues and seem to get better results handing our steel models in .ifc to detailers. Then again, this is industrial, arch is not making the models.