JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,587
In-office debate about the attached sketch.
The top section is a wide flange with a channel cap on top with welds at the WF flange tips.
The bottom section is a wide flange with the same channel - but the connection is at the WF neutral axis via two figuratively thin
plates and a small gap between WF top flange and channel web. Assume the two connector plates in the second option are very small/thin.
It appears that both would have the same value of Q for determining horizontal shear for the weld attachment calculation.
However it doesn't seem intuitively correct that the welds would carry the same shear as the flexural behavior of the two sections seem very different.
Any thoughts?
The top section is a wide flange with a channel cap on top with welds at the WF flange tips.
The bottom section is a wide flange with the same channel - but the connection is at the WF neutral axis via two figuratively thin
plates and a small gap between WF top flange and channel web. Assume the two connector plates in the second option are very small/thin.
It appears that both would have the same value of Q for determining horizontal shear for the weld attachment calculation.
However it doesn't seem intuitively correct that the welds would carry the same shear as the flexural behavior of the two sections seem very different.
Any thoughts?