pcronin
Structural
- Nov 15, 2002
- 53
I am a structural engineer in the lovely state of New Jersey and occasionally my firm deals with residential projects. My question is limited to unreinforced CMU basement walls and the wall thicknesses provided in this chart.
If I calculate the soil pressure on the wall based on Rankine theory with good soil properties (friction angle of 34 degree, unit weight of 115 pcf) the walls shown in this chart NEVER work. Even if I assume active pressures (assuming flexibility at the top connection) with a Ka=0.283 and precommpression due to the self weight of the house (even though 50% of the walls are non bearing and won't have axial load), the calculation tensile stress (M/S - P/A) always exceeds the allowable tension of 25 psi (ACI 530, Ungrouted Type M/S mortar).
How does the IRC justify the thicknesses in these tables? If my firm is involved in a basement wall, it is usually due to cracking and it is difficult to explain that the IRC “Guidelines” do not meet the material design codes. This is very difficult to explain to Joe Homeowner because he just thinks I am a typical over-conservative engineer.
If I calculate the soil pressure on the wall based on Rankine theory with good soil properties (friction angle of 34 degree, unit weight of 115 pcf) the walls shown in this chart NEVER work. Even if I assume active pressures (assuming flexibility at the top connection) with a Ka=0.283 and precommpression due to the self weight of the house (even though 50% of the walls are non bearing and won't have axial load), the calculation tensile stress (M/S - P/A) always exceeds the allowable tension of 25 psi (ACI 530, Ungrouted Type M/S mortar).
How does the IRC justify the thicknesses in these tables? If my firm is involved in a basement wall, it is usually due to cracking and it is difficult to explain that the IRC “Guidelines” do not meet the material design codes. This is very difficult to explain to Joe Homeowner because he just thinks I am a typical over-conservative engineer.