Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No. This is such a big no, that I'm not sure where to begin. You cannot simply just assume away the moment transfer and it will disappear, that sort of logic is mind boggling.DaveAtkins said:Simply assume there is no moment transfer between beam and column and design the members accordingly.
First up I'd check the implications of having a rigid or semi rigid connection here. If you are just designing the connection then send the question up the line. When I'm designing connections that I'd prefer to be pinned, but they end up being semi rigid I run the model using both scenarios and check the suitability of both.X4vier said:Cap plate for Pipe - How can release moments?
Thin end plates can accomplish this quite effectively. I've used this approach for HSS beam to beam connections in a recent project. But there I was only transferring shear.X4vier said:Typical cap plates for pipes will have bolts around the pipe, is there a way to release moments in that type of cap plate?
human909 said:No. This is such a big no, that I'm not sure where to begin. You cannot simply just assume away the moment transfer and it will disappear, that sort of logic is mind boggling.
Driftlimiter said:This "not a pinned connection" absolutism is odd. I see connections like that taken as pinned all the time.
That is a plainly false assumption. Depending on the loading conditions the beam over the column may not have a 0 degree slope. If it does not have a zero degree slope then it necessarily will transfer moment into the column if the connection is rigid.DaveAtkins said:I assume this is a beam cantilevering over a column. If so, then this type of connection is designed as pinned to the top of the column. The bending moment from the cantilever equals the bending moment in the backspan, and no moment is transferred to the column.
I don't have any problem with this. I have a problem with you ASSUMING away a potential issue by pretending it is a pinned connection when it isn't.DaveAtkins said:I am not sure why human909 has a big problem with this, since this is the way it is typically done.
Exactly.WesternJeb said:In no universe do I see this as a pin. If the beam wants to deflect and the bottom flange is restrained via the bolts to top of column, the column will want to "bend over" with it. When it doesn't bend over as the beam goes to deflect, that is restraining rotation.
For it to be a pin, the flanges would have to be able to lift off of the support plate, which they can't.
Why do you find the reality odd? And why do you think that just because "you see it all the time" make it true?driftLimiter said:This "not a pinned connection" absolutism is odd. I see connections like that taken as pinned all the time.
I don't think scale changes much, scale things up or down and we still largely get the same behaviour.WesternJeb said:I would like to clarify that most of my experience with this connection has been designing 20 ton bridge cranes that are cantilevered 15' or so from the column. That might bias myself a little bit.. But I still stand that this is a connection that leans to more fixity than pinned.
Yep. As above I've seen the same.WesternJeb said:I have seen a steel frame for a church canopy built like this from a contractor without an engineer. The system was a W8 beam spanning 25' between two HSS columns with the connection shown above. Not only was the beam deflecting around 8" in the middle, but both of the columns were also deflecting inward to match the slope of the beam! This screams fixed to me.