ivorm
Structural
- May 20, 2008
- 11
I'm wondering if someone familiar with ASTM E1300 can provide a little help with some double glazed sealed glass unit design (curtain wall). I'm in Canada and we typically design glass to CAN/CGSB 12.20. In Canada we use average hourly wind velocity while the US (ASTM) uses 3 second gust. I have unfactored wind pressures from a wind study for a building I'm working on which is based on average hourly windspeed at 10m. Typically I would use that wind pressure and compare it directly to the glass resistance with CAN-CGSB 12.20. However everything in ASTM E1300 references "3 second duration uniform load".
Can I use the unfactored pressures from my wind study and compare it to the unfactored glass resistance calculated using ASTM E1300? Or do I need to convert pressure to average hourly wind velocity, then to 3 second gust, then to a 3 second pressure to be used in ASTM E1300? For a given wind event the pressure is the pressure, it shouldn't matter how it's measured but obviously if you use the following equation to convert a 3 second gust velocity to a pressure versus an average hourly wind velocity to a pressure you're going to get different pressures. The equation below is the same one used in the Canadian code but we use different units which implies the equation is valid for average hourly wind. Would I use the equation below to convert a 3 second gust to a 3 second duration design pressure for ASTM E1300 or would that velocity need to be modified first?
p=0.00256(V^2)
where
p= pressure in psf
V=velocity in mph
Thanks,
Ivor
Can I use the unfactored pressures from my wind study and compare it to the unfactored glass resistance calculated using ASTM E1300? Or do I need to convert pressure to average hourly wind velocity, then to 3 second gust, then to a 3 second pressure to be used in ASTM E1300? For a given wind event the pressure is the pressure, it shouldn't matter how it's measured but obviously if you use the following equation to convert a 3 second gust velocity to a pressure versus an average hourly wind velocity to a pressure you're going to get different pressures. The equation below is the same one used in the Canadian code but we use different units which implies the equation is valid for average hourly wind. Would I use the equation below to convert a 3 second gust to a 3 second duration design pressure for ASTM E1300 or would that velocity need to be modified first?
p=0.00256(V^2)
where
p= pressure in psf
V=velocity in mph
Thanks,
Ivor