JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,583
I just went to a recent seminar where the new AISC Specificaton was introduced - it is a combined spec where ASD and LRFD are mixed in together so you have one spec and two different design methods within.
I thought it was a good solution overall for AISC as they have had all sorts of issues with many engineers just refusing to convert to LRFD.
A couple of observations on it all:
1. One point brought out was that if all the updates over the last few years had occurred in ASD (i.e. if there never was an LRFD) then the ASD spec would be a lot more complex than the current one. So therefore many of the arguments about ASD being so much simpler aren't quite as accurate as we initially thought.
2. In the ASD - ALL equations have changed.
3. Do you think that some engineers will get the two systems mixed up during design? Will this cause problems, errors, collapses?
4. The speaker asked our room of about 150 to raise their hands if they currently use ASD and then if they currently use LRFD - the result was about 80% ASD and 20% LRFD
I thought it was a good solution overall for AISC as they have had all sorts of issues with many engineers just refusing to convert to LRFD.
A couple of observations on it all:
1. One point brought out was that if all the updates over the last few years had occurred in ASD (i.e. if there never was an LRFD) then the ASD spec would be a lot more complex than the current one. So therefore many of the arguments about ASD being so much simpler aren't quite as accurate as we initially thought.
2. In the ASD - ALL equations have changed.
3. Do you think that some engineers will get the two systems mixed up during design? Will this cause problems, errors, collapses?
4. The speaker asked our room of about 150 to raise their hands if they currently use ASD and then if they currently use LRFD - the result was about 80% ASD and 20% LRFD