bookowski
Structural
- Aug 29, 2010
- 983
Does anyone know what the following designation means. Building is from 1982 in NY, concrete. On plan there is a typical perimeter spandrel beam, shown in section it is noted as having #3@12 closed ties (which does not satisfy d/2) with a note that extra ties are required where "ET" is shown on plan and to refer to the extra tie schedule (schedule is on top/middle of attachment).
The extra tie schedule notes #3 as the size and for spacing uses "Spacing EE" which I am guessing means each end. I had the following guesses:
- 6/5 means 6 ties @5", however they use the @ designation everywhere else for rebar spacing so I don't know why they'd mix it up here
- @6" for the first 5ft?
- 6/5 refers to left/right ends respectively, so 6 ties and 5 ties - but how many, spacing, over what length? Is it implied one extra between each basic shown in section?
There is a beam schedule for other beams in the building and it uses similar designations, i.e. under stirrups it will say "10/6 Bal @ 12". I have a full set of drawings including typical beam details and there is no explanation or abbreviations/symbols section - good set of drawings otherwise.
Doing some modifications in this area that will affect shear. Image attached.
The extra tie schedule notes #3 as the size and for spacing uses "Spacing EE" which I am guessing means each end. I had the following guesses:
- 6/5 means 6 ties @5", however they use the @ designation everywhere else for rebar spacing so I don't know why they'd mix it up here
- @6" for the first 5ft?
- 6/5 refers to left/right ends respectively, so 6 ties and 5 ties - but how many, spacing, over what length? Is it implied one extra between each basic shown in section?
There is a beam schedule for other beams in the building and it uses similar designations, i.e. under stirrups it will say "10/6 Bal @ 12". I have a full set of drawings including typical beam details and there is no explanation or abbreviations/symbols section - good set of drawings otherwise.
Doing some modifications in this area that will affect shear. Image attached.