LearningAlways
Structural
- Aug 17, 2014
- 70
What effective width do you typically design a precast wall for? PCI recommends a width that is 12*thickness + bearing width. ACI recommends 4*thickness + bearing width which is three times as small as PCI's recommendation.
Maybe the difference comes in the first line of ACI's load distribution definition. From ACI318-14, Section 11.2.3.1: Unless otherwise demonstrated by an analysis, the horizontal length of wall considered as effective for resisting each concentrated load shall not exceed the less of the center-to-center distance between loads, and the bearing width plus four times the wall thickness.
Perhaps PCI has performed testing which increases their width to what they recommend but I haven't found much in PCI to justify their recommendation. Fellow engineers at my company stay with ACI's recommendation. We ran a finite analysis using mesh and the results are closer to ACI.
Does anyone know what study PCI did to justify this increase?
Maybe the difference comes in the first line of ACI's load distribution definition. From ACI318-14, Section 11.2.3.1: Unless otherwise demonstrated by an analysis, the horizontal length of wall considered as effective for resisting each concentrated load shall not exceed the less of the center-to-center distance between loads, and the bearing width plus four times the wall thickness.
Perhaps PCI has performed testing which increases their width to what they recommend but I haven't found much in PCI to justify their recommendation. Fellow engineers at my company stay with ACI's recommendation. We ran a finite analysis using mesh and the results are closer to ACI.
Does anyone know what study PCI did to justify this increase?