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Frame assessment - load in horizontal struts?

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marcg99

Civil/Environmental
Feb 16, 2011
3
Hi,

I'm assessing a cast iron frame struture, made of vertical columns with horizontal struts.

I am looking through a previous assessment, where only the column loads were calculated - a full analysis with the struts included in a structural model was not performed.

However it was assumed that the struts attached to any 1 column carried 10% on the column load, and were assessed on this 10%.

How realistic is this 10%? I can't find any guidance / code references on the issue, and don't want to go through a complicated re-analysis by adding in the struts and additional loading.

Thanks!
 
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Can you post a sketch of the structure?

Mike McCann
MMC Engineering
Motto: KISS
Motivation: Don't ask
 
What happens if you assume the struts carry 0% of the column load?

BA
 
Is the 10% strut load a bracing force? Having a hard time understanding what you mean. As Mike said, a sketch might help.
 
Ok hopefully attached a diagram...

The column that has been assessed is in black, and has a load, P, from a structure (part existing part new) above. The struts I talk about are in blue - these are assumed to have a load of P/10 (both tension and compression have been checked in the calculations I am reviewing).

There is no full structural model with the struts in to calculate the exact forces - just this P/10 assumpton. It is this I am querying, as I can't find any basis for this (why not 5% or 20% for example) either in the calculations, or in a variety of codes I've looked in - its likely it was just a rule of thumb advised by a more senior engineer originally.

Ultimately if the stuts fail, I will need to take a long buckling length for the column / think about strengthing the existing stuts to ensure they don't fail.

Its may not be not the best approach, but am just trying to verify the approach the previous analysis / calculations have used for now.

Thanks!
 
 http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=f4589596-8dee-4f63-9b89-a12a2137930d&file=diagram.jpg
That is a bracing force. Modern codes assume this to be 2% to 5%.
 
Thanks a lot - that helps!

Do you know of a specific code and clause reference? Am in the UK so a eurocode / BS 5400 reference would be handy if possible...
 
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