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Hi ALL I work with steel structure

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Ayham85

Structural
Joined
Jul 17, 2012
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Hi ALL
I work with steel structure, has any one have any references about POST-TENSIONED STEEL TRUSSES for long spans?
this method of construction reduces the steel up to 50% ( check Telstra Stadium in australia-span 112m ) the idea of this method is to use cables in the bottom chord of the truss to resist the tension forces and reduces the deflection by post-tensioning the cables after assembling the trusses
 
sorry I forgot the subject ((POST-TENSIONED STEEL TRUSSES for long spans))
 
I am sure this probably has been done. But steel is cheap and labor is high - so I have never seen it here in US. Concrete - yes
 
I have seen a similar concept for a airport concourse, but cant remember where.

 
If I am not mistaken, the St Louis airport - or the last one I was in - god knows where - uses a threaded steel rod for the bottom chord for trusses. Kind of pretty and seems to work just fine
 
Sounds like a workable idea. Why not?

BA
 
The post-tensioned trusses for the Telstra Stadium roof were used in the post-Olympic reconfiguration. Not something which is done everyday.


On the other hand, there have been a number of posttensioned arch structures built, mostly as aircraft hangars. The ones I am familiar with were called "Strarch" arches. After a structural failure or two, I think the company went bust.
 
Extreme care must be taken whenever one is innovating, but lots of companies have gone bust doing the mundane.

BA
 
I believe Dulles Airport in Washington, D.C. uses a system similar to what you are describing for part of its concourse.
 
We used three 4" diameter wire ropes to create bowstring trusses on the Alamodome in San Antonio.
These weren't post-tensioned exactly but were set to length to provide the required camber. I've attached a photo of one of the trusses.



 
 http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=c763148b-4c56-44b6-bd86-ee9bec0e0155&file=Alamodome103.jpg
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