Strengthening existing open web joists - Fisher, Eng. Jour, 4Q2005
This is one of those areas where the standard of care floats wildly, some engineers look up the history and try to figure out an original design and check it for any revised loads, some slap in some cross bracing to share the load between two-three joists and don't (I suppose) analyze, still others will mark it up for field-spliced joists and pretty much skip any design calculations (a KCS joist maybe, to avoid any shear issues), and some won't bother with any analysis at all or any reinforcement, and then some will give four pages of supplemental welding.
Best case scenario, you can either ID the joists in the field, or make a viable surmise based on the span, depth, spacing, and existing construction and/or plans. from there a shear strength envelope (H series has 50% minimum at the center, K has 25%), and a moment envelope can be drawn for new and existing. Back when AOL was a bigger deal, I think NJ Bouras had an online joist calculator that made pretty pictures (Vulcraft had an MS-DOS program I've never quite gotten the hang of)...
Anyway then you can devise reinforcing/bypasses, etc, if needed.
The risk with identifying in the field based solely on span, depth, and spacing, is that it's a proprietary Non-SJI joist and you come up with a pretty unestablished set of design values that you then reinforce based on. I've only had one project so far that I couldn't ID the joist as an SJI product, and that's where I went with the spliced joists. I was dealing with HVAC units, a heavy hung hood and a MUA (it's for a restaurant going into the space), and the joists were locally produced proprietary, while I "found" section sizes for the joist layout, the problem is the capacity of the connections/welds. How beyond building a full analytical model, oh, and the snow load increased.
Documentation varies so wildly from project to project.
I don't recommend this article, much, as there is so little connective tissue for a lot of these assertions, but it does give you an idea of how someone else approaches the issue:
Charles (or I guess Mr. Whitley) never responded to any of my questions so enjoy the typos and various invalid specs that were "violated". It took me almost a week to find that 600,000 limit, and that's for Steel, steel joists aren't in the specification for steel construction by AISC and that limit doesn't strictly apply.
Regards,
Brian