GWoodPE said:
Kootk, why .0018 and not .0025 or .002, whatever walls would require?
Again, because 0.0018 is:
1) Much greater than the three bar business and;
2) Closer to reinforcing ratios that have performed well for me in the past on commercial structures.
You seem to be rather slowly trying to make the point that the reinforcing ration chosen is somewhat arbitrary in all scenarios. If that's the case, please just say so directly so that we can acknowledge the truth of that and move on.
GWoodPE said:
Are you seeing shrinkage cracks be a problem in residential?
Not necessarily
shrinkage cracks but basement wall cracks in general. It seems to me that, when real issues crop up, they tend to be associated with things like frost and hydro-static pressure rather than -- or perhaps in addition to -- shrinkage cracking. Some additional comments regarding my experience with cracked basement walls.
1) When I practiced in WI, cracked basement walls were a thing. Almost a cliche really. If I'd cared to, I could have easily made a living out of just driving around looking at people's cracked basement walls.
2) In Alberta, where I currently practice, cracked basement walls are just as much of a thing as they were in WI.
3) On this forum, I have seen many, many examples of cracked basement walls all over the US and Canada in both concrete an masonry.
4) Do all, or even most, lightly reinforced basement walls crack up? Of course not. If they did, practices would change. In this context, I think that a "high risk for cracking problems" probably means something on the order of 5% of the homes that get built this way. But, then, that's still too much in my opinion and the opinion of that lucky, one in twenty home owner who has his or her basement go to hell in a hand-basket.
GWoodPE said:
So you are basically promoting the idea that there shouldn't be specific codes for different types of structures, if a parking garage or office building requires a specific minimum steel then a residential basement should have the same?
Nope. What I'm promoting is this:
Where established engineering methods would predict an egregious deficiency for something constructed to prescriptive code minimums, I don't feel that the prescriptive code minimums should be allowed to stand. Obviously, my concern here has much more to do with vertically un-reinforced walls etc than it does with crack control horizontal bars.
This is just a paraphrase of my previous comment:
KootK said:
I think that there's a world of difference between:
1) Prescriptive because it's empirical and nobody really knows how the mechanics work and.
2) Prescriptive when we have established methods to evaluate the situation and those very methods would indicate an egregious lack of capacity.
I'm cool with #1 but not #2.
GWoodPE said:
I do think 18" spacing is better than 36", but I'm looking for better justification.
In the absence of crippling market pressure, you're justification should simply be what you, as an engineering professional, feel is right. And that would seem to be this:
GWoodPE said:
Seems like we aren't quite sure of the exact purpose of the reinforcing, but its definetely not enough.
GWoodPE said:
Is there some old fashioned engineering approach to calculate the minimum rather than just relying on ACI's empirical ratio and spacing requirement?
I don't know about old school but there are methods available:
1) Estimate shrinkage strain potential based on geometry and expected restraint and design crack control reinforcing accordingly.
2) Design the wall as a two way plate for the flexure that you realistically expect on the critical vertical an horizontal planes.
I don't often go to this level of detail but, then, I provide meaningful reinforcing ratios whenever I can get them. And, like most everyone else, I uncomfortably bow to market pressure on many residential projects.
HELP! I'd like your help with a thread that I was forced to move to the business issues section where it will surely be seen by next to nobody that matters to me: