At my work we check decks and the stiffeners we fit under them. Up til now we've tended to use the area of the section as the shear area. We've been picked up on this and have hit a bit of a headache.
When you look at for example an I beam you take the shear area of the flange ignoring the webs, similar with square hollow sections etc only using the side in the direction of the load.
If you have a flat plate BS5950 says that you use 90% of the area. But where I'm getting confused is if you check the plate and say it gets utilised 102%, if we add a small flat bar stiffener under the plate the rules say that you only use the vertical part thus ignoring the plate that almost got you there, and then if the flat bar is looked at on its own it is over utilised more than 102%
Can anyone enlighten me as to how we should be looking at this problem, surely you can't ignore the deck plate as it has to be doing something.
Thanks
Scott
When you look at for example an I beam you take the shear area of the flange ignoring the webs, similar with square hollow sections etc only using the side in the direction of the load.
If you have a flat plate BS5950 says that you use 90% of the area. But where I'm getting confused is if you check the plate and say it gets utilised 102%, if we add a small flat bar stiffener under the plate the rules say that you only use the vertical part thus ignoring the plate that almost got you there, and then if the flat bar is looked at on its own it is over utilised more than 102%
Can anyone enlighten me as to how we should be looking at this problem, surely you can't ignore the deck plate as it has to be doing something.
Thanks
Scott