Maybe I'm the one perceived as taking shots at PEMB engineers. That's not the case. I consider them very good engineers within their charter, squeezing every last psi of capacity out of their buildings. And ther's nothing wrong with that. My real issues are:
*Lack of documentation. I'm one of the schmucks who get called when someone needs a window, a load increase, a hole cut in the roof, a monorail. The calculations (we always ask for them, never really get them), are indecipherable. We might get a couple of pages of summary, no interactions, no tributary loads, no section properites, no nothing. I know the calculations are done. How about someone figuring out a presentation that can be followed after the building is built?
*As far as the retrofit projects, the PEMB supplier is never any help. Just once, I'd like to get a contribution (or a call back)from them. How is it that every PEMB supplier has lost every calculation every done? I've heard that there were floods, fires and every other kind of pestilence imaginable. I don't think it's the engineers fault. I think that the PEMB companies see follow-on service as just an invitation for litigation.
Once again, I think that PEMB engineers are very good. They do good work. But for god's sake, think of the other guy. We're trying to make our client's happy, too.