A tower that is being built to the new California seismic Codes (ASCE 7-10) and ASME VIII. I use Compress software to perform my calcs because the design is conservative. I realize that there are FEA methods to reduce the size of anything with the right amount of effort, however, I don't want to discuss all the various ways to improve the model.
The vessel is a "replace-in-kind" job and the client wishes to re-use the old foundation with the old anchor bolts. California Building Code (CBC) (according to the client CE) allows the tower to be placed on the old foundation apparently without modification to the foundation if the weight of the new vessel is within 10% of the old vessel. I read this part of the CBC and I agree in part with the clients interpretation of the Code.
However, the old anchor bolts are 1.5" dia and according to the calculations from Compress the new anchor bolts would be ~3.0" dia. I checked the design of the original anchor bolts by simulating the original Code of construction on the tower and it was close enough to accept that that the original design was correct at the time.
Now the client will not replace the anchor bolts with the larger size and will reject the vessel if the base ring is cut to fit the 3.0" anchor bolts rather than the 1.5".
Are the anchor bolts considered part of the new design and therefore required to be larger? Or since they are permanently secured to the foundation are they grandfathered as part of the foundation according to CBC?
I can't separate the anchor bolt calculation from my Compress output without removing all support calculations of the base ring and it wouldn't be appropriate to do so. However, the only way I make a 1.5" anchor bolt pass to the current siesmic loads(to grandfather them) is to increase its allowable stress far above reason.
Sorry for the long post but I wanted to see what CE's, structurals, and mechanicals had to say about this pickle.
The vessel is a "replace-in-kind" job and the client wishes to re-use the old foundation with the old anchor bolts. California Building Code (CBC) (according to the client CE) allows the tower to be placed on the old foundation apparently without modification to the foundation if the weight of the new vessel is within 10% of the old vessel. I read this part of the CBC and I agree in part with the clients interpretation of the Code.
However, the old anchor bolts are 1.5" dia and according to the calculations from Compress the new anchor bolts would be ~3.0" dia. I checked the design of the original anchor bolts by simulating the original Code of construction on the tower and it was close enough to accept that that the original design was correct at the time.
Now the client will not replace the anchor bolts with the larger size and will reject the vessel if the base ring is cut to fit the 3.0" anchor bolts rather than the 1.5".
Are the anchor bolts considered part of the new design and therefore required to be larger? Or since they are permanently secured to the foundation are they grandfathered as part of the foundation according to CBC?
I can't separate the anchor bolt calculation from my Compress output without removing all support calculations of the base ring and it wouldn't be appropriate to do so. However, the only way I make a 1.5" anchor bolt pass to the current siesmic loads(to grandfather them) is to increase its allowable stress far above reason.
Sorry for the long post but I wanted to see what CE's, structurals, and mechanicals had to say about this pickle.