Stazz
Structural
- Oct 22, 2008
- 100
I noticed this in 3d:
Recently I was modeling continuous grade beams by spanning 5 individual beams node to node on simple supports as individual physical members between each joint. The ends were modeled as fixed and the beams were in a straight line so I would suspect that the end moments would match the end moments of the adjacent beam but I noticed that these moments were a lot different. When I changed the model so that the beam was one continuous physical member over the intermediate supports, then I got the theoretical results I suspected where the full end moment transfered to the next beam.
After some dabeling, I found that I could get the 1st model to produce the results I wanted by releasing the axial load in each members. Is there some FE analysis theory behind this of why this causes the model to work?
Recently I was modeling continuous grade beams by spanning 5 individual beams node to node on simple supports as individual physical members between each joint. The ends were modeled as fixed and the beams were in a straight line so I would suspect that the end moments would match the end moments of the adjacent beam but I noticed that these moments were a lot different. When I changed the model so that the beam was one continuous physical member over the intermediate supports, then I got the theoretical results I suspected where the full end moment transfered to the next beam.
After some dabeling, I found that I could get the 1st model to produce the results I wanted by releasing the axial load in each members. Is there some FE analysis theory behind this of why this causes the model to work?