JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,587
For some years the "standard" wind speed for most of the US has been 90 mph.
This wind speed has essentially become sort of a standard vernacular for building design.
Despite the wind speed going to 115 mph for the central non-coastal US, with the advent of the ASCE 7-10 and the revised wind speed maps, it seems that there is still a prevalent use of 90.
The 90 mph number shows up on various websites for municipalities, counties, etc. as a design requirement.
I've seen city websites where the current code is IBC 2012 (and ASCE 7-10) but the city "law" states that 90 mph is to be used...totally contradictory. Or is it?
I initially put this off as just some city employees not understanding the newer codes, but then got to wondering if the 115 mph wind "design speed" was really still just a 90 mph wind with some safety factor/importance factor added in.
So should we still be speaking in terms of 90 mph when discussing this with non-engineer types, media, etc. or is it now wrong to use 90 and 115 is the correct value?
I can see a lot of people getting confused over the "change" from 90 to 115. Is the 115 mph really based on a 90 mph 3 second gust wind and is it OK to refer to them interchangeably?
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This wind speed has essentially become sort of a standard vernacular for building design.
Despite the wind speed going to 115 mph for the central non-coastal US, with the advent of the ASCE 7-10 and the revised wind speed maps, it seems that there is still a prevalent use of 90.
The 90 mph number shows up on various websites for municipalities, counties, etc. as a design requirement.
I've seen city websites where the current code is IBC 2012 (and ASCE 7-10) but the city "law" states that 90 mph is to be used...totally contradictory. Or is it?
I initially put this off as just some city employees not understanding the newer codes, but then got to wondering if the 115 mph wind "design speed" was really still just a 90 mph wind with some safety factor/importance factor added in.
So should we still be speaking in terms of 90 mph when discussing this with non-engineer types, media, etc. or is it now wrong to use 90 and 115 is the correct value?
I can see a lot of people getting confused over the "change" from 90 to 115. Is the 115 mph really based on a 90 mph 3 second gust wind and is it OK to refer to them interchangeably?
Check out Eng-Tips Forum's Policies here:
faq731-376