LSPSCAT
Structural
- Dec 19, 2007
- 123
I am working on designing several large brackets to anchor to an existing concrete structure. The brackets are anchored to a wall near the top edge with design loads ranging from 50 kip, 100 kip, and 200 kip. Load is applied at approximate 12" eccentricity to the face of wall. Anchors must resist tension and shear. I am leaning towards design with a shear key to transfer the shear load; as I cannot get reasonble anchor bolt groupings and associated bracket size using bolts to transfer shear. Some contention at that juncture because we do have evidence of older designs which simply used anchor bolts to transfer shear force.
Design specification is to use post installed adhesive anchors. Cannot thru-bolt the anchorage.
The design work is preliminary at this point and we do not have existing drawings to indicate existing wall reinforcing.
Current design references are AISC Design Guide 1, Design of Monopole Baseplates, and Appendix D.
Does anyone have any other strategies to tackle this situation? Using Appendix D really seems to limit the shear breakout condition. Looking back at older PCI design guides it appears they could readily resist 100 kip shear loads with embedded nelson studs. I know this topic has been discussed before just seeing if anyone has any updates or thoughts. Also just two points of clarification below. (Thinking out loud)
Point of clarification:
1.) It will always be conservative to simply use the bolt group moment of inertia in determing the bolt forces rather than performing an elastic analysis of the anchor bolts using a reinforced concrete beam analogy. Just looking for a confirmation.
2.) I have also seen calculations performed where engineers assume the baseplate pivots about an edge with a linear strain distribution through the anchors; this would produce unconservative results.
Design specification is to use post installed adhesive anchors. Cannot thru-bolt the anchorage.
The design work is preliminary at this point and we do not have existing drawings to indicate existing wall reinforcing.
Current design references are AISC Design Guide 1, Design of Monopole Baseplates, and Appendix D.
Does anyone have any other strategies to tackle this situation? Using Appendix D really seems to limit the shear breakout condition. Looking back at older PCI design guides it appears they could readily resist 100 kip shear loads with embedded nelson studs. I know this topic has been discussed before just seeing if anyone has any updates or thoughts. Also just two points of clarification below. (Thinking out loud)
Point of clarification:
1.) It will always be conservative to simply use the bolt group moment of inertia in determing the bolt forces rather than performing an elastic analysis of the anchor bolts using a reinforced concrete beam analogy. Just looking for a confirmation.
2.) I have also seen calculations performed where engineers assume the baseplate pivots about an edge with a linear strain distribution through the anchors; this would produce unconservative results.