op said:
A plan checker is telling me that I can't do this because there is a cold joint too close to the edge and that ACI 318-14 section 17(anchorage to concrete) would treat this as a cold joint and it is un-acceptable.
1) I am ignorant of this ACI provision. Can you direct me to it?
2) I'll admit that when I first saw the detail, my initial gut reaction harbored a little "ick". That said, it's my brain's job to accurately mold my gut's intuition over time. I can see why the detail has drawn some reviewer concern though.
3) On a purely technical basis, I fail to find fault with this. I envision the load path as shown below and, for me, the only real question is that which the OP has raised. Namely, does the cold joint sour things for the expanded breakout frustum?
4) I think that an important question for us to ask ourselves here, en route to any real understanding, is this: why is it okay for us to
ever anchor into cracked concrete? After all, as many have pointed out, we routinely anchor into cracked concrete. I don't know the answer to this question with certainty but my feel for it is as follows:
a) The level of cracking that we're talking about is on the order of 0.3 mm.
b) I think that Mr. Poisson is our friend here and that the natural compression field that develops helps to close the joint so long as that compression is counterbalanced by some tension resistance someplace.
c) a + b = you probably still have well functioning shear friction operating on the vertical cold joint that allows the diagonal tension stresses to continue to govern the performance of the joint.
5) I struggle to see how the argument formulated in #4 wouldn't apply to a cold joint like the one that we're discussing here unless shrinkage results in a joint much larger than 0.3 mm, which I doubt. Moreover, there are all manner of cold joints routinely used in beams and slabs that are required to do more or less the same thing: stitch the transverse plane together robustly that diagonal tension continues to govern shear capacity. So there's nothing new under the sun here in that regard.
6) As shown below, I suspect that you'd develop the upper crack pattern prior to fully engaging the lower unless the upper portion is debonded somehow. I don't see this as a deal breaker, however, since we're concerned with a ULS load event here.
7) If it were me, I'd like to see the bars spaced more tightly such that you had more right behind the anchor. Maybe three rows vertically and 6"-8" OC horizontally. This is just gut feel / instinct though... no numbers.
On balance, I think that this is a pretty clever detail. I may steal it and make it my own should the need arise.
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: