JLNJ
Structural
- Oct 26, 2006
- 1,986
I have searched Google to no avail, so now I’m turning to the even more powerful eng-tips forum members.
We have been seeing a type of shear connection where the web of a tee is fitted perpendicular to a girder web and the connecting beam is bolted through the flange of the tee using an endplate. I guess the advantage to this is that the beam can be cut square and cut short. Additionally, no bolts are shared, so OSHA should be happy. Has AISC commented on these? The mechanism which provides end rotation flexibility is not intuitively obvious to me, and the apparent eccentricity hurts my eyes to look at.
I have used connections similar to these when have a column continuous through a girder (with their respective webs @ 90 degrees). I fit a tee to the girder web to provide a direct load path for the column flange load above into the column flange below through the outstanding tee flange. If a beam intersects at the same point, then it frames into the tee flange with standard clips.
These other connections I’m asking about are one-sided and are not at a column. The tee is simply to shorten the beam and to make the connection outside of the limits of the girder flanges. Has there been any discussion of these types of connections? I presume there has been. They seem to be somewhat common in parts of Europe.
We have been seeing a type of shear connection where the web of a tee is fitted perpendicular to a girder web and the connecting beam is bolted through the flange of the tee using an endplate. I guess the advantage to this is that the beam can be cut square and cut short. Additionally, no bolts are shared, so OSHA should be happy. Has AISC commented on these? The mechanism which provides end rotation flexibility is not intuitively obvious to me, and the apparent eccentricity hurts my eyes to look at.
I have used connections similar to these when have a column continuous through a girder (with their respective webs @ 90 degrees). I fit a tee to the girder web to provide a direct load path for the column flange load above into the column flange below through the outstanding tee flange. If a beam intersects at the same point, then it frames into the tee flange with standard clips.
These other connections I’m asking about are one-sided and are not at a column. The tee is simply to shorten the beam and to make the connection outside of the limits of the girder flanges. Has there been any discussion of these types of connections? I presume there has been. They seem to be somewhat common in parts of Europe.