OSUCivlEng
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 12, 2009
- 275
The code and the commentary in AASHTO LFRD Sec. 14.7.5.3.3 seem to be contradicting each other. The code says "In bearings with externally bonded steel plates on both top and bottom, the peak hydrostatic stress shall satisfy:".
The commentary says "However, in a bearing equipped with external plates, upward movement of part of the plate can cause internal rupture due to hydrostatic tension. Provisions have been added to address this case."
I am designing bearing pads using Method B, and we never specify the pad to be bonded to the anchor (or sole) plate. The way I read the code, I only have to worry about hydrostatic stresses if my anchor plate is bonded to the pad. The way I read the commentary I should check hydrostatic stresses because I have an external plate.
Did they just forget to put "bonded" between external and plates or am I missing something here?
The commentary says "However, in a bearing equipped with external plates, upward movement of part of the plate can cause internal rupture due to hydrostatic tension. Provisions have been added to address this case."
I am designing bearing pads using Method B, and we never specify the pad to be bonded to the anchor (or sole) plate. The way I read the code, I only have to worry about hydrostatic stresses if my anchor plate is bonded to the pad. The way I read the commentary I should check hydrostatic stresses because I have an external plate.
Did they just forget to put "bonded" between external and plates or am I missing something here?