BA:
We agree, that Q is zero at the top surface of the top flg., and for that reason VQ/I goes to zero and makes absolutely no sense as a means of calculating that weld size. If I made the side pls. fit btwn. the t&b flgs. I doubt anyone would disagree that VQ/I at the underside of the top flg. would be divided by the sum of the three (nominal) web thicknesses and that would be the shear stress in the webs at that level, a constant value in all webs. Then this would be multiplied by the thickness of the side pl. and its weld would be designed for that shear flow, but now it’s a shear flow in kips/inch of length of weld, not thickness of web. And, in fact this is about what I said I would do to size that weld, since it seems closer to our normal practice than a very small weld, which blindly using VQ/I might suggest. I said, “In any event I would probably design the welds in question for the shear stress around the bottom of the flg., the shear flow at that level would be divided btwn. the three webs in proportion to their thicknesses, and I would design my weld to take that shear force, and I doubt that it would take much more than a min. fillet, although I’ve not run any numbers.”
And, I would assume we agree that the combined moment of inertia for this section is the sum of the moments of inertia of the WF plus that of the two side plates, it’s symmetrical. And, I agree with you that loads will be shared by the three elements in proportion to their relative stiffness, but we must connect the three element to make that load transfer take place wherever the load is applied on the combined member. If the load is applied to the top of the WF it will take about 75% and each side pl. will take half the rest, and you will have to design two sets of welds which distrib. 25% into the side pls. Lion06 picked slightly differently proportioned WF and side pls. for this example. If the load rests on your new slightly high side pls. then you will need two welds which transfer 75% of the load to the WF, and this load might be expressed in lbs./inch, a type of shear flow as relates to weld design, since that is basically the way a fillet reacts to these loads. I guess I’m using the term shear flow in about three slightly different ways here. But, 75% would lead to unrealistically large welds, so this load application wouldn’t be my first choice. I think Lion06 and Toad were debating that as a solution, but with 25%/4 as determining the weld size, and I might buy that if I could compare some real numbers.
In your example of the three WF’s side by side, you are dealing with a slightly different problem. You are saying I will divide the load between three identical type members and I would say that load will split in proportion to relative stiffness, EI, assuming you provide a means to be sure that load distrib. will happen. That’s akin to my .125/.75/.125 discussion above. That may be by welding them together at the flg. tips, probably not a good means of attachment in this case, or it may be by some other structural system which assures that the three WF’s will deflect equally under the load, but the normal stresses or the shear flows and shear stresses at any given level may not be constant or the same from WF to WF in this case. And, in fact, this probably leads to some differential shear flow btwn. each WF at the flg. tips, if you choose to weld there. The original problem was to make a built-up member which would act as an integral unit, not as a series of three beams which deflect the same amount, and carry the load.
Ishvaaag’s discussion about plane sections remaining plane, normal stresses and shear stresses at a given level being constant across the member, is exactly in keeping with the Theory of Elasticity for this symmetrical section, working in the elastic range. q = VQ/I is constant at any level, it’s a shear flow (kips/inch of thickness); and if you divide it by the sum of web thicknesses at that level you will get the shear stress at that level, tau = q/t = VQ/It (ksi). The shear force at that level if you are sizing a weld is (q/t) times (t for that web), again a shear flow (kips/inch), but now I think of this in terms of kips/inch of length because, that’s the way I think of the cap’y of a given weld throat. The shear flow and shear stress in SAIL3's cross section exactly fits this situation, 3 uniform webs of some thickness, leads to tau avg. = q/t and t is now 3(individual web thick.). If his inner web were thicker than the outer webs it would need a larger weld (q/t)*(t for that web), a shear flow used to select the needed weld throat. When we look at the WF at the underside of the top flg. I just consider the three nominal web thicknesses, q is constant at that level, but the shear stress gets funky (using Lion06's terminology, notice I don’t discuss lower joints any longer, or shorter) in the region of the WF web/flg. radii, it transitions from tau in its web to tau in the flg. and then into that long, straight sloped line as it goes to zero at the top surface of the flg. As an aside, I still have a couple buckets of shear flow left over from that last thread on this subject, but now they are all mixed up, some of them are shear flow/inch of length and some of them are shear flows/inch of web thickness, and I don’t know how to sort them out.