southard2
Structural
- Jul 25, 2006
- 169
OK so I designed a beam to column connection with the beam cantilevering over a column cap plate. Its a very small project and normally I might have never even seen the in field condition because the project is so small. But I did and a instantly noticed that the cap plate on the column was missing. They welded the bottom flange of the wide flange beam directly to the wide flange column. This is a braced frame with two column and one beam. On one end the beam bears on top of the column and was modeled as a pinned connection. One the other end the beam cantilevers about 10 feet and I modeled that connection as a full moment connection using four bolts through the beams bottom flange into the column cap plate.
Because the beam is deep and continuous very little moment actual transfers into the column (only like 342 lb-ft). The resulting axial load into the column from the beam is 18 kip. So for the most part this is a typical beam to column connection with just a bit of moment.
Normally I'd tell them to do it over and built it right but this guy is on the city commission. So before I tell him to repair the situation I wanted to explore other analysis options.
My first thought was to treat it as a column to transfer beam connection but again I've always seen a baseplate/cap-plate.
Then I thought I could analysis this as a directly welded moment connection which is commonly used for a W-Beam to W-Column Flange connection. Only in this case the column would be the beam and the beam would be the column. In other words the column in this case is directly welding to the flanges of the beam. Force transfer is force transfer. I could check the beam as if it were the column etc.
Now the typical moment connection usually has the flanged directly welded to handle the moment and a shear plate or angles for the shear transfer. But now that I'm typing this out my thinking may still be flawed because the major load is an axial load which is usualy zero in this type of connection. So while I could easily justify or retrofit the existing connection for shear and moment transfer I'm still in trouble with the axial load.
Has anyone ever seen any design method for a connection like this. All columns I've seen have baseplates and cap plates....so I'm kind of at a loss.
At the bear minimum I'm going to somehow have to explain in layman's terms why has to reshore the structure and add the cap plate. Were talking about a lot of work here. Right now I'd have to say something to the effect of, "It might work, but I can't prove it one way or the other".
Thanks in advance for everyone's thoughts,
John
John Southard, M.S., P.E.
Because the beam is deep and continuous very little moment actual transfers into the column (only like 342 lb-ft). The resulting axial load into the column from the beam is 18 kip. So for the most part this is a typical beam to column connection with just a bit of moment.
Normally I'd tell them to do it over and built it right but this guy is on the city commission. So before I tell him to repair the situation I wanted to explore other analysis options.
My first thought was to treat it as a column to transfer beam connection but again I've always seen a baseplate/cap-plate.
Then I thought I could analysis this as a directly welded moment connection which is commonly used for a W-Beam to W-Column Flange connection. Only in this case the column would be the beam and the beam would be the column. In other words the column in this case is directly welding to the flanges of the beam. Force transfer is force transfer. I could check the beam as if it were the column etc.
Now the typical moment connection usually has the flanged directly welded to handle the moment and a shear plate or angles for the shear transfer. But now that I'm typing this out my thinking may still be flawed because the major load is an axial load which is usualy zero in this type of connection. So while I could easily justify or retrofit the existing connection for shear and moment transfer I'm still in trouble with the axial load.
Has anyone ever seen any design method for a connection like this. All columns I've seen have baseplates and cap plates....so I'm kind of at a loss.
At the bear minimum I'm going to somehow have to explain in layman's terms why has to reshore the structure and add the cap plate. Were talking about a lot of work here. Right now I'd have to say something to the effect of, "It might work, but I can't prove it one way or the other".
Thanks in advance for everyone's thoughts,
John
John Southard, M.S., P.E.