TehMightyEngineer
Structural
- Aug 1, 2009
- 3,073
Not sure why I didn't ask this question sooner but whatever.
In the 13th Edition of the AISC manual they drop off any W-section below a W8 from the tables. I HATE this! Doing industrial work I often need to use a W6 or W4 for numerous reasons and usually they are very lightly loaded and I would love to just grab their plastic flexural strength from a table or use Table 3-10 to calculate their flexural capacity for a small unbraced length. Same if I want to use them as a stubby column. Yes, it's not hard to hand-calc the numbers on them but why did they feel the need to save 10 pages in the manual and leave these members out? GAH!
</rant> My question is does the 14th Edition manual include these small W sections in the tables (such as Table 3-2, 3-10, etc.)? I still haven't got around to buying ASIC-10 yet, haven't had the need. If so I'd buy it right now.
Maine EIT, Civil/Structural.
In the 13th Edition of the AISC manual they drop off any W-section below a W8 from the tables. I HATE this! Doing industrial work I often need to use a W6 or W4 for numerous reasons and usually they are very lightly loaded and I would love to just grab their plastic flexural strength from a table or use Table 3-10 to calculate their flexural capacity for a small unbraced length. Same if I want to use them as a stubby column. Yes, it's not hard to hand-calc the numbers on them but why did they feel the need to save 10 pages in the manual and leave these members out? GAH!
</rant> My question is does the 14th Edition manual include these small W sections in the tables (such as Table 3-2, 3-10, etc.)? I still haven't got around to buying ASIC-10 yet, haven't had the need. If so I'd buy it right now.
Maine EIT, Civil/Structural.