ATSE
Structural
- May 14, 2009
- 594
Consider an electrical room inside a larger industrial area. That is, room is "self-standing" with stud wall terminating below the ceiling (not at the floor or structural roof above).
Walls and ceiling are cold formed steel, Cee shapes.
Ceiling is 8" tall Cee shape spanning 18'. It has 9/16" Vercor metal deck on top of joists, bracing top flange with #10 SMS at 24" oc.
5/8" type X gypboard fastened to btm flange at 12" oc.
Walls are 6" tall Cee shape, 11' tall, with gypboard both sides.
A cold formed manufacturer's design guide that recommends bridging at third points (6' from each wall for this case).
If the top flange and bottom flange are fully braced at no more than 24", what benefit is bridging?
Is this a 2007 AISI code requirement, or a good idea, or a waste of time and money, or a miscommunication in the design guide?
Walls and ceiling are cold formed steel, Cee shapes.
Ceiling is 8" tall Cee shape spanning 18'. It has 9/16" Vercor metal deck on top of joists, bracing top flange with #10 SMS at 24" oc.
5/8" type X gypboard fastened to btm flange at 12" oc.
Walls are 6" tall Cee shape, 11' tall, with gypboard both sides.
A cold formed manufacturer's design guide that recommends bridging at third points (6' from each wall for this case).
If the top flange and bottom flange are fully braced at no more than 24", what benefit is bridging?
Is this a 2007 AISI code requirement, or a good idea, or a waste of time and money, or a miscommunication in the design guide?