KBVT
Structural
- Mar 24, 2008
- 129
I have been involved in a discussion with a coworker about the requirements for serviceability design. There is some confusion about what the required load combinations are for the checking of deflections and building drifts. I have a few questions that I was hoping to get some help on. All questions are referencing ASCE 7 load combinations.
1. In an LRFD designed building, are ASD load combinations applicable for serviceability checks (i.e. deflections, vibrations, etc.)?
2. In calculating building drift due to wind, it is it acceptable to use the ASD load combinations and substitute 0.7W for 1.0W in order to reduce the wind pressures from a 50-year return event to a 10-year return event?
3. In calculating buiding drift due to seismic, ASCE 7 explicitly states to use strength level seismic forces. Is it acceptable to substitute 1.0E for 0.7E in the ASD load combinations in order to use service level loads for other loading types besides seismic loads?
4. ASCE 7-02 has a commentary on serviceability considerations. In the commentary, several load combinations are presented in order to achieve a 0.05 annual probability of being exceeded:
D + L
D + 0.5S
D + 0.5L (creep or long-term considerations)
D + 0.5L + 0.7W (drift for walls and frames)
Are engineers utilizing these load combinations in the commentary for the calculation of deflections, vibrations, drift, etc.?
1. In an LRFD designed building, are ASD load combinations applicable for serviceability checks (i.e. deflections, vibrations, etc.)?
2. In calculating building drift due to wind, it is it acceptable to use the ASD load combinations and substitute 0.7W for 1.0W in order to reduce the wind pressures from a 50-year return event to a 10-year return event?
3. In calculating buiding drift due to seismic, ASCE 7 explicitly states to use strength level seismic forces. Is it acceptable to substitute 1.0E for 0.7E in the ASD load combinations in order to use service level loads for other loading types besides seismic loads?
4. ASCE 7-02 has a commentary on serviceability considerations. In the commentary, several load combinations are presented in order to achieve a 0.05 annual probability of being exceeded:
D + L
D + 0.5S
D + 0.5L (creep or long-term considerations)
D + 0.5L + 0.7W (drift for walls and frames)
Are engineers utilizing these load combinations in the commentary for the calculation of deflections, vibrations, drift, etc.?