I was running some design on a moment frame (end fixity at beam and column connection) and realized that I was always taught to
leave one of the column connections pinned, and the other "released", or a roller if you will.
I started playing around with modeling both column bases as "pinned" and noted that the frame behavior improved significantly in terms
of story drift.
In the real world, we will bolt that column base to the beam or wall on which it stands....it is not rolling around.
what is the accurate way to model a typical, 3 member moment frame? Pinned on both column bases? Or Pinned on one, roller on the other?
leave one of the column connections pinned, and the other "released", or a roller if you will.
I started playing around with modeling both column bases as "pinned" and noted that the frame behavior improved significantly in terms
of story drift.
In the real world, we will bolt that column base to the beam or wall on which it stands....it is not rolling around.
what is the accurate way to model a typical, 3 member moment frame? Pinned on both column bases? Or Pinned on one, roller on the other?