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Jambruins
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 1, 2004
- 46
Anyone know where I can get a copy of the 9th edition ASD Steel Construction Manual. It doesn't have to be an acutal book, a download would be fine. Thanks.
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I disagree.jsdpe25684 said:There are currently 3 different methodologies.
Sure, but only because one document came out in 1989, and the other 16 years later. If AISC hadn't abandoned ASD back in the '80s, we'd all be used to the "current" ASD as the natural progression of the green book. How many threads are on this forum asking how to calculate something that is not addressed in the green book, that is addressed in later volumes? The specification has developed to include more scenarios. The fact that it has grown more complex is analagous to the observation that ASCE 7 has doubled in size the last five years. It is not indicative of a third design philosophy.LSPSCAT said:Lets be clear - the new "ASD" - Allowable Strength Design - is not what was set forth in the 1989 Green Book "ASD" - Allowable Stress Design.
Best I can tell, that is not a fact...and that's a fact LOL. New stuff has been added to fill in holes. There are dozens of design checks that are missing from the 89 ASC Manual that are in the 13th Ed. Until someone invents a way to make something bigger on the inside than it is on the outside, that's going to require a bigger and more complex book.It is the fact that LRFD introduced too much new stuff for the sake of saving a pound of steel
Examples? I think there is only one obscure design check that existed in 89 that doesn't exist now--could be wrong about that, though. Of course the equations look different because different models are used. Take unbraced beams for example. Look in Salmon and Johnson, far enough back that they cover both ASD89 and AISC86 or 93. The Fb vs Lb curve for LTB is a real mess for ASD89. It's far, far cleaner and more logical using the modern formulation....and I lost many of the formulas that I was so comfortable with, not even LRFD versions.
I've never understood this objection. I used ASD89 for 3 years then LRFD since 98. I've designed many projects with very tight early release schedules with LRFD and it doesn't cause problems because I very rarely crank through sizeable equations from the Spec. It's either done with a program or a table. If someone's still doing lots of manual calcs in 2010, then IMO that's an issue with how the engineer chooses to do the calcs. If the issue is that the mean ole' 13th Ed. has a design check (that applies) that wasn't in the 89 Spec., then no sympathy on needing to check it, right?AISC is not listening to those of us who need speed over steel savings.
I have one at home that I used in college. Can you believe they taught 9th edition ASD in 2005?!